Tuberculous, fungal, and parasitic infections infect millions of people throughout the world. While other problems usually overshadow their rheumatologic manifestations, nearly all these infections can involve bone or joints and may on occasion present with rheumatologic symptoms. The classic model of these diseases presenting as chronic monoarticular arthritis is still generally valid but other presentations, such as tenosynovitis with atypical mycobacterial infections, erythema nodosum with leprosy, coccidioidomycosis and histoplasmosis, and reactive arthritis with schistosomiasis and helminthic infections, are now well established. The most dramatic change in the epidemiology of tuberculous infections in recent years is the increasing incidence in patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Mycobacterium avium complex infections in particular have increased dramatically and are a major problem in the later stages of AIDS. Reports of septic arthritis and tenosynovitis due to M. avium are likely to increase over the next few years.

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