| Literature DB >> 8614616 |
Abstract
Immunodeficient children pose a challenge to clinicians because of the interrelationship between infectious disease, metabolism, gastrointestinal tract function, psychosocial problems, and immune function. The interplay between these factors is not always clear, and frequently the best course of therapy is obscured because of an inability to determine which factors have the greatest impact on child health. To optimize therapeutic intervention, a multidisciplinary health care team must be involved with the management of children and their families.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1996 PMID: 8614616 PMCID: PMC7172360 DOI: 10.1016/s0031-3955(05)70421-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Clin North Am ISSN: 0031-3955 Impact factor: 3.278
GLOBAL DISTRIBUTION OF HIV-INFECTED PEOPLE
| Sub-Saharan Africa | 8 million |
| Latin America and Caribbean | 1.5 million |
| South-East Asia | 1.5 million |
| North America | 1.5 million |
| Western Europe | 500,000 |
| North Africa and Middle East | 75,000 |
| Eastern Europe and Central Asia | 50,000 |
| East Asia and Pacific | 25,000 |
| Australia | 25,000 |
CLINICAL AND IMMUNOLOGIC ASPECTS OF HIV DISEASE
| Early events | Acute febrile illness or asymptomatic infection | Infection of CD4+ lymphocytes with possible decrease in CD4 T-lymphocyte number | Infection of T cells and possibly macrophages in the lymphoid aggregates |
| Intermediate events | Altered body composition; lactase deficiency; bacterial overgrowth; malabsorption; | Decreased CD4+ T-cell number, NK activity, cytotoxic T-cell activity, B-cell and macrophage number | Increased CD8+ and decreased CD4+ T lymphocytes in the lamina propria; decreased lgA secretion;extensive HIV-1 trapping in lymphoid aggregates |
| Late events | Malnutrition; enteric infection (cytomegalovirus, | Decreased B-cell, T-cell, and monocyte/ macrophage function | Decrease in lamina propria lymphoid elements; breakdown in mucosal lymphoid aggregate structure with release of HIV- 1 from follicular dendritic cells |
Figure 1Early infection of HIV that may infect T cells and macrophages after crossing the intestinal mucosa. Infected cells then migrate through the circulation and home to the lamina propria of the intestine.
Figure 2Asymptomatic phase of HIV infection in which virus is trapped within lymphoid aggregates. During this phase, speculation is that IgA decreases, acid secretion declines, and brush-border enzymes decrease in specific activity. As a child enters the symptomatic period, malabsorption, epithelial cell dysfunction, and infections such as Candida become more evident.
Figure 3Late or end stage of HIV disease is characterized by loss of follicular dendritic cells and increased circulating virus. CD4 count declines, and opportunistic infection and malignancy are more prevalent.
Figure 4The relationship between malabsorption, malnutrition, enteric infection, immune deficiency, and HIV disease.
TREATMENT OF ORAL OR ESOPHAGEAL LESIONS
| Candida | Fluconazole |
| Ketoconazole | |
| Amphotericin B | |
| Cytomegalovirus | Ganciclovir |
| Herpes simplex virus | Acyclovir |
| Acid-induced | H2 antagonists |
| Antacids | |
| Sucralfate | |
| Cisapride |
GASTROINTESTINAL MANIFESTATIONS OF PRIMARY IMMUNODEFICIENCY DISEASES
| IgA deficiency | Asymptomatic, chronic |
| X-linked agammaglobulinemia | Chronic |
| Transient hypogammaglobulinemia of infancy | Chronic diarrhea, enteritis, colitis, regurgitation. Symptoms usually resolve by 1 year of age |
| Common variable immunodeficiency | Chronic |
| Severe combined immunodeficiency: Adenosine deaminase deficiency Purine nucleoside phosphorylase deficiency | Chronic diarrhea, malabsorption, enteropathy, Candida esophagitis, bacterial enteritis/colitis, chronic rotavirus, or cytomegalovirus |
| Chronic granulomatous disease | Granulomatous enterocolitis, vitamin B12 malabsorption, hepatic and perirectal abscesses, antral narrowing, steatorrhea, dysphagia |
| CD 11/CD 18 Leukocyte glycoprotein deficiency | Stomatitis/pharyngitis, oral/esophageal candidiasis, perirectal abscess |
| Schwachman's disease | Pancreatic insufficiency |
| C2 deficiency | Colitis |
| Wiskott-Aldrich: T-cell dysfunction, eczema, thrombocytopenia | Enteric infections, bloody diarrhea, malabsorption (unusual) |
| Ataxia-telangiectasia: Cerebellar ataxia, oculocutaneous telangiectasia, sinopulmonary infections | Diarrhea if IgA-deficient, otherwise increased incidence of gastrointestinal malignancy |
| DiGeorge: Right-sided aortic arch, bifid uvula, congenital heart disease, dysmorphic facial features, hypoparathyroidism | Esophageal atresia, esophageal candidiasis, chronic diarrhea |
| Purtillo: Chronic Epstein-Barr viral infection, hypogammaglobulinemia, aplastic anemia | B-cell lymphoma, "septic" hepatitis |