Parasitic infections associated with HIV/AIDS in the Caribbean
Date
1995Author
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This review article seeks to highlight the significance for the Caribbean of major parasitic infections associated with AIDS, encourage awareness of these opportunistic parasites, and promote familiarity with appropriate diagnostic techniques and their clinical relevance. Specific agents considered include Pneumocystis carinnii; Toxoplasma gondii; the enteric coccidians Cryptosporidium spp., Isospora belli, and Cyclospora cayetanensis; the hemoflagellates Leishmania spp. and Trypanosoma cruzi; the fungi Histoplasma capsulatum and Cryptococcus neoformans; the nematode Strongyloides stercoralis; and the mite Sarcoptes scabiei. These disease agents can be divided into two groups, the immune-regulated "endogenous" parasites (the protozoans P. carinii and T. gondii, and posibly the roundworm S. stercoralis) and intracellular parasites (including the enteric coccidia, hemoflagellates, and fungi). Both in the Caribbean and elsewhere, the endogenous parasites (particularly P. carinii and T. gondii) are the most troublesome for AIDS patients, partly because they are likely to be transmitted and establish a bening immunoregulated presence early in the subject's life. Indeed, health management programs for AIDS patients often routinely include P. carinii prophylaxis, since nearly all such patients who survive long enough are expected to experience an episode of acute P. carinii infection. In contrast, there is no known epidemiologic association between AIDS and strongyloidiasis in the Caribbean, and the prevalence there of potentially opportunistic hemoflagellates such as Leishmania spp. and Trypanosona cruzi is relatively low (AU)
Subject
Collections
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Oddo, David; Acuña, Guillermo (s.d.)To help fill gaps in existing knowledge about opportunistic parasitic infections in Chile, histologic material from 5,612 autopsies performed from 1960 through mid-1986 was examined. This examination found 175 opportunistic ...
-
Marchiol, Andrea; Forsyth, Colin; Bernal, Oscar; Valencia Hernández, Carlos; Cucunubá, Zulma; Pachón Abril, Eduin; Vera Soto, Mauricio Javier; Batista, Carolina (2017)[ABSTRACT]. Worldwide, over 6 million people are infected with Trypanosoma cruzi, the pathogen that causes Chagas disease (CD). In the Americas, CD creates the greatest burden in disability-adjusted life years of any ...
-
Fica, Alberto; Sotomayor, Viviana; Fasce, Rodrigo; Dabanch, Jeannette; Soto, Andrés; Charpentier, Paulo; Guerrero, Gonzalo; Olivares, Felipe; Triantafilo, Vjera; El Omeiri, Nathalie; Gaínza-Lein, Marina (2019)[ABSTRACT]. Objective. To 1) describe clinical characteristics of adult patients in Chile with severe acute respiratory infections (SARI) associated with influenza viruses, and 2) analyze virus subtypes identified in ...