To determine the role of mycobacteria as etiologic agent in HIV related enteritis in Africa, the following study was performed in 1986, in the department of Internal Medicine in Mama Yemo Hospital in Kinshasa, Zaire. Stool and intestinal biopsies were obtained from HIV seropositive and HIV seronegative patients with and without diarrhea. Patients with known Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection were not enrolled. Acid fast bacilli were found in fecal smears of 6 (10%) of 59 HIV seropositive patients and in none of 41 HIV seronegative patients (p = 0.04). Isolation rates of mycobacteria were slightly lower in HIV seropositive patients than in HIV seronegative patients (25% vs 44%, p = 0.08) and significantly lower in patients with diarrhea than in patients without diarrhea (15% vs 44%, p = 0.02). Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare was the species most frequently isolated from stools, in 12% of the HIV seropositive and in 22% of the HIV seronegative patients. Mycobacteria were not isolated from any of the intestinal biopsies obtained in 17 HIV seropositive patients with persistent diarrhea and any of these biopsies showed histological evidence of a mycobacterial infection. This study suggests that mycobacteria do not seem to play a major role in causing diarrhea in HIV seropositive patients.
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Background And Aims: People who have diabetes mellitus (DM) are thought to be more susceptible to pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB). Several published comparative investigations have reported that chest x-ray images from PTB with DM are considered atypical due to their frequent involvement of the lower lung field (LLF). This study aimed to investigate the frequency of lower lung field tuberculosis (LLF-TB) in DM and the risk factor of DM for the development of TB.
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Centre for Gender and Sexual Health Equity, Faculty of Medicine, 1190 Hornby St., Vancouver, BC, V6Z 1Y6, Canada.
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West China School of Public Health and West China Fourth Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China.
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Department of Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD.
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