Unusual manifestations of pneumococcal infection in human immunodeficiency virus-infected individuals: the past revisited. |
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Authors: | M C Rodriguez Barradas D M Musher R J Hamill M Dowell J T Bagwell C V Sanders |
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Affiliation: | Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Ben Taub General Hospital, Houston, Texas. |
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Abstract: | Although AIDS was largely recognized and defined because of the increased presence of diseases that reflect deficiencies in cell-mediated immunity, susceptibility to common extracellular bacterial pathogens has also been shown to be increased. To our knowledge, adults with concurrent infection due to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and Streptococcus pneumoniae whose cases have been described to date have all had pneumococcal pneumonia and/or bacteremia. We describe five cases of HIV-infected patients who had unusual manifestations of pneumococcal infection, which include recurrent exudative pleural effusion, pyopneumothorax, purpura fulminans, mediastinitis with chest wall abscess, and multiple brain abscesses. Such complications of pneumococcal infection occurred more or less commonly in the preantibiotic era, but on the basis of our experience and an exhaustive literature search, these complications have been exceedingly rare in the past few decades. In four of our five patients, the unusual, complicated pneumococcal disease preceded and prompted a search for HIV infection. Because concurrent HIV infection increases the susceptibility to pneumococcal disease, other such cases are likely to be seen. |
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