AI Article Synopsis

  • A 43-year-old male with untreated HIV for six years experienced significant weight loss, abdominal pain, and difficulty swallowing, ultimately diagnosed with small bowel obstruction due to untreated cytomegalovirus ileitis.
  • Treatment for both HIV and CMV ileitis began during hospitalization, but complications arose from disseminated histoplasmosis affecting his lungs and GI tract, causing intestinal stricture and recurring obstruction.
  • This case highlights the rare complications of untreated HIV, particularly histoplasmosis, emphasizing the need for awareness of gastrointestinal symptoms in HIV patients.

Article Abstract

A 43-year-old male has a medical history of Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) with no anti-retroviral therapy for six years prior to admission. He presented from an outside hospital with 40 lbs weight loss over one year, worsening abdominal pain, and odynophagia, with CT-confirmed small bowel obstruction (SBO) in the setting of untreated cytomegalovirus (CMV) ileitis. Treatment for both the untreated HIV and CMV ileitis was started during this hospitalization, and his hospital course was complicated by disseminated histoplasmosis in his lungs and GI tract, leading to stricture and a recurrent SBO. This case report will focus on an unusual complication of untreated HIV and a late diagnosis of histoplasmosis: Histoplasma ileitis-induced stricture and recurrent SBO. To date, there are a limited number of reports that describe gastrointestinal histoplasmosis in HIV patients, and SBO remains a rare and serious complication of disseminated histoplasmosis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8148622PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.14677DOI Listing

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