Authors


Luis A. Espinoza, MD

Latest:

Severe Psoriasis in Advanced HIV Infection

A 50-year-old African American man with HIV infection had a CD4+ T-cell count of 18/μL (1%), CD8+ cell count of 1035/μL (69%), and CD4:CD8 ratio of 0.01 at the time of diagnosis. He had multiple erythematosquamous skin lesions over his forehead, face, chest, back, and extremities


Luis Espinoza, MD

Latest:

Keloid After Herpes Zoster in an HIV-Infected Person

It results from reactivation of latent varicella-zoster virus (VZV) within the


Marco Tomassi, MD

Latest:

The Changing Face of Anal Cancer

Cancer of the anal canal is a relatively uncommon disease in the United States. It accounts for about 2% of the cancers of the GI tract; about 5000 cases will be diagnosed this year. Squamous cell carcinoma of the anus (anal SCC) is of particular interest to the infectious disease specialist because it is one of the cancers associated with HIV infection in men who have sex with men (MSM).


Mark J. Fuerst

Latest:

Men with HIV Take Testosterone at High Rates

HIV-infected men appear to be using testosterone replacement without adequate baseline evaluation and establishment of recommended indications.


Mark L. Fuerst

Latest:

HIV Infection Raises Risk of Heart and Kidney Disease

"What we need to do now is to help people with HIV realize the full potential of their much-extended life expectancy."


Mary A. Vogler, MD

Latest:

Acute MI With Long-Standing AIDS: A Perfect Storm of Risk Factors for Premature Coronary Artery Disease

The patient is a 54-year-old man, a native of Poland who has lived in the United States for many years. A diagnosis of AIDS was made in 1994, when Hodgkin disease (nodular sclerosing Hodgkin lymphoma) was found in an enlarged cervical lymph node and he tested positive for HIV during his workup.


Mauro Torno, MD

Latest:

Pill Impaction Mimicking Appendicitis in an HIV-Positive Patient

A 45-year-old Hispanic man who acquired HIV infection in April 2003 presented with a 24-hour history of worsening right lower quadrant pain accompanied by fever, decreased appetite, nausea, and vomiting.


Mehri McKellar, MD

Latest:

HIV Testing in the Emergency Department

In a recent editorial in The AIDS Reader, the “burden of responsibility for routine HIV testing” was accurately described as now falling on all clinicians, including those in emergency departments (EDs). Routine HIV testing in the ED seems logical because patients who seek health care in the ED are often underinsured and have low incomes, the very populations with a higher prevalence of undiagnosed HIV.


Michael S. Saag, MD

Latest:

Ryan White: An Unintentional Home Builder

As Indiana native John Mellencamp might say, “Ryan White was born in a small town.” Kokomo, Ind, in 1971 indeed was a thriving, relatively small community in America’s Heartland. A town founded on family values, hard work, and a full belief in the American Dream,


Michael Shallman, MD

Latest:

Pill Impaction Mimicking Appendicitis in an HIV-Positive Patient

A 45-year-old Hispanic man who acquired HIV infection in April 2003 presented with a 24-hour history of worsening right lower quadrant pain accompanied by fever, decreased appetite, nausea, and vomiting.


Monisha Arya, MD, MPH

Latest:

African American Women and HIV/AIDS: A National Call for Targeted Health Communication Strategies to Address a Disparity

In 1998, President Clinton declared HIV/AIDS to be a "severe and ongoing crisis" in the African American community and launched the


Nancy Arzate-Mora, DDS

Latest:

Oral Plasmablastic Lymphoma

A previously healthy 43-year-old man was referred to the hospital for the diagnosis of a nodular lesion in the mandibular gingiva.


Nancy F. Crum-Cianflone, MD, MPH

Latest:

Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease: An Increasingly Common Cause of Liver Disease Among HIV-Infected Persons?

Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is an increasingly recognized condition in the general population worldwide.


Ned E. Heltzer, RPh, MS

Latest:

GSK and Pfizer to Merge HIV Drug Units in New Company, Sixteen States Inconsistent With CDC HIV Testing Recommendations

London-based GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) plc and New York–based Pfizer Inc have announced they will combine their HIV drug divisions into a new company (Kelley T. Bloomberg News. April 16, 2009). GSK will hold an 85% share of the joint venture; Pfizer will hold 15%. According to a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission, GSK Senior Vice President Dominique Limet, a physician, is CEO-designate of the new company.


Pansy Ferron, PA-C, MPH, MS, PhDc

Latest:

Recurrent Urothelial Bladder Cancer Among HIV-Infected Patients

We report 4 cases of bladder cancer in an ethnically diverse population of about 2500 HIV-infected patients. These patients were younger than the median age at diagnosis of bladder cancer in the United States.


Patricia Martin-Rico, MD

Latest:

Oral Plasmablastic Lymphoma

A previously healthy 43-year-old man was referred to the hospital for the diagnosis of a nodular lesion in the mandibular gingiva.


Paul E. Sax, MD

Latest:

HSV-1 Encephalitis Complicated by Cerebral Hemorrhage in an HIV-Positive Person

Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) is the most common cause of sporadic encephalitis worldwide. In the California Encephalitis Project, 24% of the cases of viral encephalitis were caused by HSV-1 and 3% were caused by HSV-2.1


Pedro Ruiz, MD

Latest:

Psychiatric Aspects of HIV/AIDS

In the era of rapid transmittal of health information and frequent educational updates via the Internet, hardcover medical texts still have a place. A worthy newcomer in this regard is Psychiatric Aspects of HIV/AIDS, edited by Fernandez and Ruiz, a comprehensive sourcebook with contributions by a panel of experts.


Peter A. Selwyn, MD, MPH

Latest:

Current Health Disparities in HIV/AIDS

The CDC and other public health organizations have identified numerous disparities in the incidence and outcomes of HIV disease among different population groups


Raphael Dolin, MD

Latest:

Ryan White: An Unintentional Home Builder

As Indiana native John Mellencamp might say, “Ryan White was born in a small town.” Kokomo, Ind, in 1971 indeed was a thriving, relatively small community in America’s Heartland. A town founded on family values, hard work, and a full belief in the American Dream,


Richa Tandon, MD

Latest:

Disseminated Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare Infection in a Person With AIDS With Cutaneous and CNS Lesions

We present the case of a 55-year-old man with AIDS who had disseminated Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare (MAI) infection who was nonadherent to antiretroviral treatment and prophylaxis for opportunistic infections.


Richard Elion, MD

Latest:

Antiretroviral Treatment Update From the 17th International AIDS Conference

The 17th International AIDS Conference was held in Mexico City from August 3 to 8, 2008. This conference attracted more than 20,000 participants and provided some significant new insights into HIV therapeutics.


Richard L. Oehler, MD

Latest:

An HIV-Infected Patient With Fever, Pancytopenia, and Renal Failure: Is This End-Stage AIDS?

Histoplasmosis is a fungal infection caused by Histoplasma capsulatum. Although immunocompetent persons with H capsulatum infections are usually asymptomatic, several clinical syndromes can manifest in immunocompromised patients.


Richard Serrao, MD

Latest:

Disseminated Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare Infection in a Person With AIDS With Cutaneous and CNS Lesions

We present the case of a 55-year-old man with AIDS who had disseminated Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare (MAI) infection who was nonadherent to antiretroviral treatment and prophylaxis for opportunistic infections.


Rita Baron-Faust

Latest:

HIV and Hypertension: The Need to Pay More Heed

About a third of HIV-positive patients have high blood pressure. Is this a predictable consequence of ordinary aging, or do their history of HIV infection and treatment play a role? Whatever the explanation, many of these patients don't take the problem seriously enough.


Robert L. Moser, MD

Latest:

An HIV-Infected Patient With Nocardia asteroides Bilateral Pneumonia

Pneumonia remains a concern for persons with long-standing HIV infection. We pre­sent a case of a 43-year-old HIV-infected woman with bilateral pneumonia whose pre­sentation suggested the cause was a bacterial pathogen.


Robert Staudinger, MD

Latest:

Neurosarcoidosis in a Patient With AIDS

Neurosarcoidosis has not been reported in patients with HIV infection. We present the case of a patient with AIDS in whom spinal cord sarcoidosis developed years after highly active antiretroviral therapy was initiated and her immune system was reconstituted. Treatment with prednisone resulted in resolution of MRI lesions and symptoms. Since patients with HIV-1 infection who are receiving antiretroviral therapy can survive for many years, physicians should be aware of chronic immune restoration disease involving the CNS.


Rodger D. MacArthur, MD

Latest:

HIV Infection in the Elderly

There is general consensus among public health authorities that the elderly are not being screened for HIV as frequently as are younger persons. But there is compelling reason to do so.


Saarah Arshad, MD

Latest:

Subacute Onset of Paralysis in a Person With AIDS

The pathogen Toxoplasma gondii is an intracellular protozoan that most commonly presents in persons with AIDS as reactivation of latent infection.


Sadao Jinno, MD

Latest:

Progression of Kaposi Sarcoma Associated With Iatrogenic Cushing Syndrome in a Person With HIV/AIDS

The prevalence of Kaposi sarcoma (KS) in HIV-infected persons in the pre-HAART era has been reported to be as high as 20%. Although AIDS-associated KS has declined by more than 80% since the introduction of highly active antiretroviral regimens, KS remains an important malignancy in the HIV-infected population

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