ABSTRACT
We describe retrospectively the experience with 44 cases of AIDS from January 1987 to October 1991 at the Instituto Nacional de Pediatria, a tertiary care children hospital in Mexico City. All patients with 2 ELISA and a positive Western Blot test were included. Thirty three patients were infected perinatally (75%) and 11 through blood transfusion (25%). Fourty one patients belonged to the P2 classification of the Centers for Disease Control. Chronic diarrhea (77%), lymphadenopathy (75%), hepatomegaly/splenomegaly (70%) and oral candidiasis (61%) were the most common clinical findings. Twenty patients died (45.4%). No statistical relation were found between survival rate and the way of transmission and age at onset. Autopsy was performed in 14 patients and revealed a sharp decrease of lymphoid tissue at all levels with severe thymic atrophy.
Subject(s)
Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/epidemiology , Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/physiopathology , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Hospitals, Pediatric , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Male , Mexico/epidemiology , Retrospective Studies , Survival AnalysisABSTRACT
Over one hundred patients diagnosed with vascular purpura at the National Institute of Pediatrics between 1979 and 1988 were retrospectively studied. Frequency was similar for both sexes. 82% were between the ages of six months and 11 years old. The extrarenal clinical manifestations were: petechias in 98%; abdominal pain 78% arthralgias 45%; melena 39%; and arthritis in 19% of the cases, 49 patients had nephropathy of different degrees and they did differently, 32 had hematuria with or without proteinuria within a nephrotic range, seven suffered from a nephrotic syndrome, one with a nephritic syndrome and nine others had a combination of two or three syndromes (nephritic/nephrotic/renal failure) with an unfavorable evolution towards terminal renal failure in eight of them; on the other hand, this was not seen in the remaining patients. Thirteen renal biopsies were taken from patients with more severe clinical manifestations, finding in them mesangial proliferation or endo- and extracapillary proliferation. These findings suggest that the initial clinical presentation of the illness allows for the prediction of the future.