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PedAM

Pediatric Disease Annotations & Medicines




Disease hiv infections
Symptom C0041327|pulmonary tuberculosis
Sentences 14
PubMedID- 23970967 Mycobacterial etiology of pulmonary tuberculosis and association with hiv infection and multidrug resistance in northern nigeria.
PubMedID- 21208352 Performance of an algorithm based on who recommendations for the diagnosis of smear-negative pulmonary tuberculosis in patients without hiv infection.
PubMedID- 23758662 Adult pulmonary tuberculosis suspects with confirmed human immunodeficiency virus infection and/or at high risk of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis are enrolled from the primary health care clinic.
PubMedID- 23857684 Comorbidity of pulmonary tuberculosis with alcoholism, hiv infection, and dm was identified in 15.0%, 4.5%, and 3.2% of the cases, respectively.
PubMedID- 22423123 Site of extrapulmonary tuberculosis is associated with hiv infection.
PubMedID- 22774625 Comparison between the radiographic findings in pulmonary tuberculosis of children with or without hiv infection.
PubMedID- 23860052 Duodenal and gastric tuberculosis found in only 1% of patients suffering from pulmonary tuberculosis with associated hiv infection in non-endemic areas.
PubMedID- 22894713 In cameroon for instance, the prevalence of hiv infection among those with smear-positive pulmonary tuberculosis increased from 16.6% in 1997 to about 29.3% in 2007 .
PubMedID- 24166044 Intestinal parasite co-infection among pulmonary tuberculosis cases without human immunodeficiency virus infection in a rural county in china.
PubMedID- 25366019 Stutzeri in a non-hiv infected patient with previously undiagnosed pulmonary tuberculosis.
PubMedID- 24470949 Value of third sputum smear for detection of pulmonary tuberculosis in hiv infected patients.
PubMedID- 20302657 Role of interferon-gamma release assays in the diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis in patients with advanced hiv infection.
PubMedID- 23919057 Our case was a case of pulmonary tuberculosis with hiv infection and one of the contributing factors for skin necrosis could be hypercoagulability secondary to hiv and tuberculosis.
PubMedID- 23147374 Such investigations would have allowed us to address whether, as shown for peripheral blood cells, antigen-specific cd4+ bal t cells that express high levels of ccr5 are preferentially eliminated 34 or if ongoing viral replication would be a similar predictor of hiv-1-specific cd8+ t-cell loss in bal 35. secondly, it might be possible that hiv-1 infection preferentially depletes m. tuberculosis-specific ccr5+ cd4+ t cells 9, 23, 36. although we have not addressed this question specifically, data from the same participants show that m. tuberculosis-specific t-cell responses in lungs of hiv-1-infected persons are markedly impaired 3. it will be important to also study these effects of hiv infection in patients with active pulmonary tuberculosis.

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