Rademaker M, Thomas R H, Provost T G, McEvoy M, Grint P C, Heath R, Kirby J D
Department of Dermatology, St Bartholomew's Hospital, West Smithfield, London, UK.
Postgrad Med J. 1987 Oct;63(744):877-9. doi: 10.1136/pgmj.63.744.877.
We report two cases of acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS), apparently without the usual exposure factors, in whom a temporal association was detected after detailed epidemiological investigation. The index case, a 45 year old housewife, had provided terminal home-nursing care for a 33 year old African man, who died from an undiagnosed encephalitis. At that time she had fissures of the skin of both her hands. Review of post-mortem pathology specimens of the African man allowed a retrospective diagnosis of AIDS with cerebral toxoplasmosis to be made. The type of home-nursing care given by the index case was quite different from that normally provided by health care workers with the training and facilities to prevent the spread of infection.