Clinical features and diagnosis of tuberculous meningoencephalitis in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus
A. A. Milyaev, В. В. Данцев, A. I. Belova, R. A. Platonova, Boris V. Zaretsky, Р. Д. Мучаидзе, В. Г. Карпущенко
Bulletin of the Russian Military Medical Academy · 2020-06
Abstract
The results of a prospective study of 66 patients aged 32,63,8 years infected with the human immunodeficiency virus who were treated in an anti-tuberculosis medical organization for tuberculosis meningoencephalitis are presented. Of these, 49 (74,2%) were newly diagnosed with tuberculosis, and 17 (25,8%) had relapses and chronic forms of tuberculosis. According to social characteristics, patients were distributed as follows: working - 9 (13,6%), non-working - 57 (86,4%), disabled people with tuberculosis - 4 (6,1%), persons who previously served their sentences in prison - 48 (72,7%). All the surveyed patients had bad habits: they continued to actively use psychoactive substances - 52 (78,8%) people, abused alcohol - 43 (65,2%), smoked - 60 (90,1%). In 97% of cases, tuberculosis of the meninges and Central nervous system was a complication of respiratory tuberculosis: tuberculosis of the intra-thoracic lymph nodes - 42,4%, disseminated pulmonary tuberculosis - 27,3%, infiltrative pulmonary tuberculosis - 22,7%, and caseous pneumonia- 7,6%. The most effective method for diagnosing the tuberculosis etiology of meningoencephalitis in patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus is the study of cerebrospinal fluid using a polymerase chain reaction. Deoxyribonucleic acid of Mycobacterium tuberculosis was detected in 31 (47%) patients. The characteristics of the cerebrospinal fluid in the examined patients are presented as follows: a decrease in glucose in 45 (68,2%) patients, an increase in protein in 59 (89,4%), and cytosis at the upper limit of normal values in 10 (15,6%). High mortality rates (47,7%) in patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus in combination with tuberculosis meningoencephalitis are associated with a high degree of immunosuppression.
MeSH terms
- Tuberculosis
- Medicine
- Meningoencephalitis
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Pneumonia
- Internal medicine
- Tuberculous meningitis
- Immunology
- Pathology