AI Article Synopsis

  • Toxoplasma gondii is a leading cause of brain lesions in AIDS patients, but guidelines for diagnosing and treating toxoplasmosis are limited.
  • A study evaluated the diagnostic methods and treatment responses in 14 patients, revealing that their symptoms were often indistinguishable from other conditions.
  • While treatment with pyrimethamine and sulfadiazine showed quick improvement, long-term therapy was necessary to sustain results, and alternative treatments were largely ineffective for those who couldn’t tolerate the main drugs.

Article Abstract

Although Toxoplasma gondii is the most commonly recognized cause of central nervous system mass lesions in patients with acquired immune deficiency syndrome, published investigations have provided little information about criteria for diagnosis of toxoplasmosis or the response to therapy. In this series the method of diagnosis and response to therapy were assessed in 14 patients who had evidence for toxoplasmosis based on routine histopathology, immunoperoxidase staining, or mouse inoculation. These patients presented with clinical and radiologic findings that did not clearly distinguish them from patients with other infectious or neoplastic processes. Excisional biopsies usually showed tachyzoites on routine histology, but needle biopsies were usually negative unless mouse inoculation or immunoperoxidase staining was employed. Response to pyrimethamine and sulfadiazine therapy was often prompt, but therapy had to be continued for long periods of time to maintain a clinical response, and no alternative regimen of one or more drugs appeared to be effective in patients unable to tolerate both pyrimethamine and sulfadiazine.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.4269/ajtmh.1987.36.509DOI Listing

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