Tania de la Paz Bermúdez, Daniel Portela Ramírez, Narciso A Jiménez Pérez, M del Carmen Dorvigny Scull, Miguel A Kitchin Wilson, Virginia Capó de Paz
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction: the Rhodococcus equi is one bacterium of the order Actinomycetales. It rarely appears in humans, but the HIV/AIDS epidemic has increased the number of cases and the main affected organ is the lung. It causes pneumonia characterized by a slow clinical and radiological progression.
Objective: to describe the initial radiological alterations from R. equi infection in 8 AIDS patients, the radiological evolution and the clinical and immunological presentation.
Methods: a retrospective descriptive study of radiological pulmonary images from AIDS patients with respiratory infection due to Rhodococcus equi was conducted.
Results: these patients presented with high fever (39 degrees C), cough with expectoration and shortness of breath. Homogeneous opacity was the most frequent radiological presentation (62,5% of cases), located predominantly in the lower lobules. The radiological evolution was characterized by opacity with inner cavitation in 4 cases, fibrosis in 4 cases, and one case showed total recovery of lesions. The CD4+ T-cell count was low in all the patients. The evolution ranged from 2 to 33 months.
Conclusions: the R equi pneumonia diagnosis should be borne in mind when dealing with HIV/AIDS patients with compromised immunological condition and breathing process with radiological manifestation of pulmonary consolidation evolving into cavitation, and torpid and prolonged clinical and radiological evolution.
期刊介绍:
La Revista Cubana de Medicina Tropical tiene la misión de publicar artículos científicos especializados en medicina tropical, microbiología, parasitología, epidemiología y otras especialidades afines. Se distribuye directamente por el editor a los suscriptores en formato impreso (ISSN 0375-0760). Está dirigida a profesionales y técnicos en el campo de la medicina tropical, microbiología, parasitología y epidemiología. Recibe contribuciones en idioma español, inglés y portugués sin distinción en el país de procedencia.