Important note: Information in this article was accurate in 1995. The state of the art may have changed since the publication date.
Mycobacterial infections in patients with AIDS in a low HIV prevalence area.
Cent Eur J Public Health. 1994 Dec;2(2):100-2. Unique Identifier : AIDSLINE MED/95211081 Stankova M; Rozsypal H; Kubin M; Slosarek M; Horova B; Bruckova M; Infection Clinic, 3rd Medical Faculty, Charles University,; Prague, Czech Republic.
Abstract:
The Czech Republic is characterized here as both a low HIV prevalence area (1.64 registered positivity per 10(5) population and 45 AIDS patients notified in the 1986-93 period) and a low tuberculosis prevalence area (mortality rate 0.8, incidence of bacillary pulmonary cases 11.3 per 10(5) population and risk of infection 0.04 in 1990). From 1986 to 1993 a total of 10 cases of mycobacterial infections complicating AIDS or ARC disease were registered in the Czech Republic in 9 male patients aged from 29 to 55, 8 homosexuals, and one woman aged 48. Classical pulmonary tuberculosis caused by M. tuberculosis was diagnosed in one male patient and was controlled by antituberculosis chemotherapy. The remaining mycobacterial infections were caused by the following opportunistic mycobacterial pathogens. (a) M. avium in five individuals, four of them died of a disseminated disease; (b) M. kansasii--in two patients, one died of a disseminated infection; (c) M. xenopi--involved in a fatal generalized CMV, and cryptococcal and mycobacterial infection; (d) M. fortuitum caused a generalized disease in a case of exhaustive multifocal encephalopathy. Authors conclude that under conditions of low prevalence of both HIV and tuberculosis infection the risk to AIDS patients of contracting classical tuberculosis is low. A relatively frequent occurrence of non-tuberculosis mycobacterial disease in AIDS patients afflicted with the impaired immunity is explained by transmission of opportunistic mycobacteria from the environment.
Keywords: Adult AIDS-Related Complex/COMPLICATIONS AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections/*EPIDEMIOLOGY Czech Republic/EPIDEMIOLOGY Female Human HIV Seroprevalence Male Middle Age Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare Infection/EPIDEMIOLOGY Mycobacterium Infections, Atypical/*EPIDEMIOLOGY Support, Non-U.S. Gov't JOURNAL ARTICLE 950730
M9570923
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