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CD4 T Lymphocyte Count and the Radiographic Presentation of Pulmonary Tuberculosis

Authors :
Mark D. Keiper
Curtis P. Langlotz
Wallace T. Miller
Maria Beumont
Ashraf Elshami
Source :
Chest. 107:74-80
Publication Year :
1995
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 1995.

Abstract

Background Pulmonary infection and tumor in the AIDS population has a variable clinical and radiographic presentation. The association between the radiographic presentation of pulmonary tuberculosis and CD4 T lymphocyte count in the HIV-infected patient is investigated in order to provide an empirical approach for early diagnosis, treatment, and isolation of infected subjects. Methods: A retrospective analysis of chest radiographs, CD4 T lymphocyte counts, and clinical history of 35 subjects from 3 urban hospitals was performed. All subjects were HIV-seropositive and had culture-proven pulmonary tuberculosis. Radiographs were evaluated for the presence of either a pattern characteristic of post-primary tuberculosis (typical pattern) or a pattern uncharacteristic of post-primary infection (atypical pattern). Results: Twenty-one of 26 subjects with a CD4 T lymphocyte count less than 0.20×10 9 cells/L, whereas only 1 of 9 subjects with a CD4 T lymphocyte count of 0.20×10 9 cells/L or more presented with an atypical pattern of pulmonary tuberculosis (p with atypical versus typical radiographic pattern of post-primary pulmonary tuberculosis were 0.069 × 10 9 cells/L (n=22) and 0.323×10 9 cells/L (n=13), respectively (p 9 cells/L). Atypical radiographic pattern included diffuse and lower lobar opacities, pleural effusion, mediastinal adenopathy, interstitial nodules, and a normal chest radiograph. Conclusion: AIDS patients presenting with CD4 count less than 0.20×10 9 cells/L and an atypical radiographic pattern for pulmonary tuberculosis are at risk for tuberculous infection requiring appropriate treatment and isolation until the diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis has been excluded.

Details

ISSN :
00123692
Volume :
107
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Chest
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........62962958eb4b057a6b21512b028240eb