Arai Y, Sato R, Katsura T, Komatsu H, Kawata K, Fujino T, Ouchi M, Yakumaru K
Division of Respiratory Diseases, National Sanatorium Minami-Yokohama Hospital, Kanagawa, Japan.
Kekkaku. 1995 Jul;70(7):431-7.
A 49-year-old Japanese male who had been imprisoned for five years then lived with other men complained of fever, constitutional symptoms and a 12 kg weight loss over four-month period. He was referred to us as his gastric washings were positive for acid-fast bacilli (AFB). Chest X-ray showed patchy, infiltrative small shadows primarily in the right upper lung field without hilar adenopathy. Before transfer to our hospital, tuberculosis chemotherapy composed of SM, INH, RFP and PZA was initiated. Over the next three weeks, fever dropped, and the above described abnormal shadows on the chest X-ray improved, leaving small cystic lesions. Although a sputum smear was negative for AFB, M. tuberculosis was isolated from cultured samples and sensitive to all standard anti-tuberculous drugs. AFB were also demonstrated on a touch imprint of biopsied cervical lymph nodes. Sputum samples turned negative one month later both on smear and culture. Moreover, high fever developed and another abnormal shadow indicative of Pneumocystis carinii (PCP) appeared in the left lung field one month after the admission. White plaque was noted in the oral cavity. Dark red nodules were observed on the upper extremities and chest wall, and diagnosed histologically as Kaposi's sarcoma. Serologic testing for HIV was positive both by PA and Western blot methods, thus AIDS was diagnosed according to the CDC surveillance case definition for AIDS with the diagnosis of tuberculosis. The patient died of wasting syndrome on the 90th hospital day. On autopsy, small thin-walled cavities were observed in the right upper lung, correlating with earlier X-ray and CT findings.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)