ABSTRACT
From January 1987 to July 1990, 16,2% of patients followed with Human Immunodeficiency Virus [HIV] infection, of which six were ill [all with AIDS], had tuberculosis. Pulmonary tuberculosis was present in four patients [66,6%], and extrapulmonary tuberculosis in six. The extrapulmonary infections were located in the mediastinal lymph nodes in two cases, the peripheral lymph nodes in two cases, and in the pleura in two cases. Pulmonary infection was multilobar in four cases with cavitary infiltrates in one case. An intradermal skin test, using 10 TU PPD, was positive in only one case. The diagnosis of tuberculosis was confirmed by evidence of Mycobacterium Tuberculosis [MT] in direct examination in three cases, by cultures in the same three cases, and histology in four cases. Preliminary results of antibacterial treatment were favorable in five patients. However, these five patients died within an average of twelve months after diagnosis of tuberculosis, corresponding with the CDC which includes extrapulmonary tuberculosis in their case definition of AIDS. A study of a larger series would allow clarification of the epidemiological aspects of tuberculosis associated with HIV infection in Morocco
Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , HIV Infections/epidemiology , Tuberculosis/diagnosis , HIV Infections/diagnosis , HIV-1/pathogenicity , HIV-2/pathogenicity , Retrospective StudiesABSTRACT
Clinical Aspects and Evolution of Lymph Node Tuberculosis Between July 1981 and May 1990, 77 patients were hospitalized for tubercular adenopathy; the majority had a low economic status and only 7% had received the BCG vaccination. The infected lymph node was either isolated [n = 36] or associated with other infections the adenopathy was profond [n = 21] and / or more frequently peripheral [n = 72]. Cervical adenopathy was the most common. The tuberculin PPD test was positive in 61% of the patients. Wheras confirmation by diagnosis was available in 66 cases [86%]. Evolution following anti-tuberculosis treatment, with multiple therapies most often used, was favorable in 65 cases; treatment was unfavorable in 7 patients having multiple associated visceral infections
Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Antitubercular Agents , Abdomen/diagnostic imagingABSTRACT
Serotype b correspond to 99% of the strains of II. influenzae isolated in meningitis. The biotypes I and II are the most frequent. The authors report on the first betalactame producing strain isolated in Morocco