加勒比地区与艾滋病毒/艾滋病有关的寄生虫感染。

R D Robinson
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摘要

这篇综述文章旨在强调加勒比地区与艾滋病相关的主要寄生虫感染的重要性,鼓励对这些机会性寄生虫的认识,并促进对适当诊断技术及其临床相关性的熟悉。考虑的特定病原体包括卡氏肺囊虫;刚地弓形虫;肠球虫有隐孢子虫、贝利等孢子虫和卡耶坦环孢子虫;血鞭毛类利什曼原虫和克氏锥虫;真菌荚膜组织原体和新生隐球菌;粪圆线虫;还有疥螨。这些致病因子可分为两类,免疫调节的“内源性”寄生虫(原生动物卡氏弓形虫和弓形虫,可能还有蛔虫粪虫)和细胞内寄生虫(包括肠球虫、血鞭毛虫和真菌)。无论是在加勒比地区还是其他地方,内源性寄生虫(尤其是卡氏弓形虫和弓形虫)对艾滋病患者来说都是最麻烦的,部分原因是它们很可能被传播,并在患者生命的早期形成良性免疫调节。事实上,艾滋病患者的健康管理项目通常包括卡氏杆菌预防,因为几乎所有存活足够长时间的艾滋病患者都会经历一次急性卡氏杆菌感染。相比之下,在加勒比地区,艾滋病和类圆线虫病之间没有已知的流行病学联系,而且那里潜在的机会性血鞭毛虫,如利什曼原虫和克氏锥虫的流行率相对较低。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Parasitic infections associated with HIV/AIDS in the Caribbean.

This review article seeks to highlight the significance for the Caribbean of major parasitic infections associated with AIDS, encourage awareness of these opportunistic parasites, and promote familiarity with appropriate diagnostic techniques and their clinical relevance. Specific agents considered include Pneumocystis carinii; Toxoplasma gondii; the enteric coccidians Cryptosporidium spp., Isospora belli, and Cyclospora cayetanensis; the hemoflagellates Leishmania spp. and Trypanosoma cruzi; the fungi Histoplasma capsulatum and Cryptococcus neoformans; the nematode Strongyloides stercoralis; and the mite Sarcoptes scabiei. These disease agents can be divided into two groups, the immune-regulated "endogenous" parasites (the protozoans P. carinii and T. gondii, and possibly the roundworm S. stercoralis) and intracellular parasites (including the enteric coccidia, hemoflagellates, and fungi). Both in the Caribbean and elsewhere, the endogenous parasites (particularly P. carinii and T. gondii) are the most troublesome for AIDS patients, partly because they are likely to be transmitted and establish a benign immunoregulated presence early in the subject's life. Indeed, health management programs for AIDS patients often routinely include P. carinii prophylaxis, since nearly all such patients who survive long enough are expected to experience an episode of acute P. carinii infection. In contrast, there is no known epidemiologic association between AIDS and strongyloidiasis in the Caribbean, and the prevalence there of potentially opportunistic hemoflagellates such as Leishmania spp. and Trypanosoma cruzi is relatively low.

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