نتایج جستجو برای: bacillary angiomatosis

تعداد نتایج: 1784  

Journal: :Obstetrics and gynecology 1996
S R Long M J Whitfeld C Eades J E Koehler A P Korn C J Zaloudek

BACKGROUND Bacillary angiomatosis is a clinicopathologic entity that most often is identified in the skin of patients with AIDS. This report presents an example of bacillary angiomatosis of the female genital tract. CASE Bacillary angiomatosis presented as red-purple nodules of the vulva and cervix in a 32-year-old woman with AIDS. Histologic examination revealed the lobular epithelioid vascu...

Journal: :Molecular pathology : MP 1999
S J Nayler U Allard L Taylor K Cooper

AIMS Bacillary angiomatosis is a rare pseudoneoplastic angioproliferative lesion occurring in patients with AIDS. This condition has been associated with Bartonella henselae and Bartonella quintana infections. Human herpesvirus 8 (HHV-8) is thought to be the causative agent of Kaposi's sarcoma, a vasoproliferative neoplasm, also commonly found in patients with AIDS. The presence of HHV-8 in a c...

Journal: :Antiviral therapy 2012
Oscar Murillo Daniel Mimbrera Ana Petit Horacio Gil Pedro Anda Marta Carrera Daniel Podzamczer

Bacillary angiomatosis mainly affects the HIV-infected population. Information is limited on the evolution of bacillary angiomatosis during immune restoration following initiation of HAART. We report an unusual case of fatal Bartonella quintana bacillary angiomatosis occurring in an HIV-infected man during the immune restoration phase.

Journal: :Baylor University Medical Center Proceedings 1999

Journal: :The New England journal of medicine 1997
J E Koehler M A Sanchez C S Garrido M J Whitfeld F M Chen T G Berger M C Rodriguez-Barradas P E LeBoit J W Tappero

BACKGROUND Bacillary angiomatosis and bacillary peliosis are vascular proliferative manifestations of infection with species of the genus bartonella that occur predominantly in patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus. Two species, B. henselae and B. quintana, have been associated with bacillary angiomatosis, but culture and speciation are difficult, and there has been little sys...

Journal: :Gastroenterology 1995
J E Koehler L Cederberg

Bacillary angiomatosis is a recently described vascular proliferative lesion that occurs most commonly in individuals infected with human immunodeficiency virus. Cutaneous lesions are the most frequently described manifestations of bacillary angiomatosis. However, as culture techniques and disease recognition have improved, additional manifestations have been identified in human immunodeficienc...

Journal: :The New England journal of medicine 1990
D A Relman J S Loutit T M Schmidt S Falkow L S Tompkins

BACKGROUND Bacillary angiomatosis is an infectious disease causing proliferation of small blood vessels in the skin and visceral organs of patients with human immunodeficiency virus infection and other immunocompromised hosts. The agent is often visualized in tissue sections of lesions with Warthin-Starry staining, but the bacillus has not been successfully cultured or identified. This bacillus...

2011
ANDREW D. CHUNG

DR J. SHAUN MURPHY: A 30-year-old woman was found to have human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) at age 22 (1989). She also had a history of moderate asthma. She had been in her usual health until 2 months before hospitalization when nonbloody diarrhea appeared. A month later, she noted a small, yellow mass arising from her umbilicus (Figure 1). Seven days before the patient's admission to the hosp...

Journal: :Revista do Instituto de Medicina Tropical de Sao Paulo 2001
J L Gazineo B M Trope J P Maceira S B May J M Coelho J S Lambert S A Nogueira

The aim of this case series was to describe the clinical, laboratory and epidemiological characteristics and the presentation of bacillary angiomatosis cases (and/or parenchymal bacillary peliosis) that were identified in five public hospitals of Rio de Janeiro state between 1990 and 1997; these cases were compared with those previously described in the medical literature. Thirteen case-patient...

Journal: :Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology 2000
R Santos O Cardoso P Rodrigues J Cardoso J Machado A Afonso F Bacellar E Marston R Proença

Bacillary angiomatosis and bacillary peliosis are opportunistic infections caused by Bartonella henselae and Bartonella quintana, which occur in patients with late-stage infection. We report a case of bacillary angiomatosis in an HIV-infected patient with skin, bone, and probably liver involvement, The identification of the agent (B quintana ) was done by polymerase chain reaction in the skin s...

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