| Literature DB >> 21559197 |
Feriyl Bhaijee1, Charu Subramony, Shou-Jiang Tang, Dominique J Pepper.
Abstract
THE GASTROINTESTINAL (GI) TRACT IS A MAJOR SITE OF DISEASE IN HIV INFECTION: almost half of HIV-infected patients present with GI symptoms, and almost all patients develop GI complications. GI symptoms such as anorexia, weight loss, dysphagia, odynophagia, abdominal pain, and diarrhea are frequent and usually nonspecific among these patients. Endoscopy is the diagnostic test of choice for most HIV-associated GI diseases, as endoscopic and histopathologic evaluation can render diagnoses in patients with non-specific symptoms. In the past three decades, studies have elucidated a variety of HIV-associated inflammatory, infectious, and neoplastic GI diseases, often with specific predilection for various sites. HIV-associated esophageal disease, for example, commonly includes candidiasis, cytomegalovirus (CMV) and herpes simplex virus (HSV) infection, Kaposi's sarcoma (KS), and idiopathic ulceration. Gastric disease, though less common than esophageal disease, frequently involves CMV, Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare (MAI), and neoplasia (KS, lymphoma). Small bowel biopsies and intestinal aspirates from HIV-infected patients often show HIV enteropathy, MAI, protozoa (Giardia, Isospora, Cryptosporidia, amebae, Microsporidia), and helminths (Strongyloides stercoralis). Colorectal biopsies demonstrate viral (CMV, HSV), bacterial (Clostridia, Salmonella, Shigella, Campylobacter), fungal (cryptococcosis, histoplasmosis), and neoplastic (KS, lymphoma) processes. Herein, we review HIV-associated GI pathology, with emphasis on common endoscopic biopsy diagnoses.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21559197 PMCID: PMC3090068 DOI: 10.4061/2011/247923
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patholog Res Int ISSN: 2042-003X
Figure 1Endoscopic features of HIV-associated GI pathology. (a, b) Esophageal candidiasis: creamy mucosal plaques, (c) esophageal ulceration, (d) duodenal giardiasis, (e) intestinal cryptosporidiosis, with granular, friable mucosa, (f) ileal lymphoid hyperplasia, (g) bacterial colitis, (h) colonic ulceration, and (i) proctitis.
Figure 2Histopathologic features of HIV-associated GI pathology. (a) CMV gastritis, (b) CMV vasculitis, (c) HSV esophagitis, (d) HSV cytopathic effect, (e) Mycobacterium avium-intercellulare (acid fast stain), (f, g) cryptosporidiosis, (h) giardiasis, (i) esophageal candidiasis, (j) candidal pseudohyphae and spores (PASD stain), (k) cryptococcosis (GMS stain), (l) histoplasmosis (GMS stain), (m) HIV enteropathy, (n, o) Kaposi sarcoma, and (p) gastric non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.
HIV-associated GI pathology: common biopsy diagnoses.
| Pathologic process | Esophagus | Stomach | Small bowel | Colorectal |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Inflammatory/Ulcerative | Idiopathic Pill-induced | Nonspecific gastritis | HIV enteropathy | HIV enteropathy Idiopathic |
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| Viral infection | CMV | CMV | CMV | CMV |
| HSV | HSV | |||
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| MAI | MAI |
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| Salmonella | ||||
| Bacterial infection | — | Shigella | ||
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| Spirochetosis | ||||
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| Cryptosporidia | ||||
| Protozoan and Helminthic infections | — | Cryptosporidia | Isospora belli | |
| Microsporidia | ||||
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| Cryptococcus neoformans | |
| Fungal infection |
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| Histoplasma capsulatum | |||
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| Neoplastic | Kaposi's sarcoma | Kaposi's sarcoma NHL | Kaposi's sarcoma | Kaposi's sarcoma NHL |
Key: HIV: human immunodeficiency virus, CMV = cytomegalovirus, HSV = herpes simplex virus, MAI = mycobacterium avium-intracellulare, NHL = non-Hodgkin lymphoma.
Endoscopic and histopathologic features of common HIV-associated GI diseases [2].
| Viral infections | Bacterial infections | Protozoal and Helminthic infections | Fungal infections | Neoplastic processes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Endoscopy ( | Erythema, vesiculation, erosion, ulceration | Hyperemia, ulceration, inflammatory pseudopolyps | Normal to atrophic mucosa | Creamy mucosal patches, ulceration, mycotic abscesses | Mucosal and submucosal mass lesions |
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| Histopathology ( | Viral cytopathic effects, inflammatory infiltrates, necrotizing vasculitis | Mucosal epithelial degeneration, loss of intestinal microvilli, cytologic atypia, epithelial fissures, inflammatory infiltrates, abundant foamy macrophages (MAI) | Mucosal atrophy, inflammatory infiltrates, eosinophilia (Isospora), histiocytosis in lamina propria ( | Cell necrosis, pseudomembranes, hyphae penetrating intact mucosa and vasculature | KS: spindle cell neoplasms with irregular slit-like spaces; NHL: dense proliferation of uniform, small, round, cells |