Neurotoxoplasmosis as debut of AIDS patients
Keywords:
toxoplasmosis, cerebral/diagnosis, prognosis, treatment outcome, hivAbstract
Since its detection in 1981, HIV/AIDS has become a global pandemic; cases have been published in all countries. It is a chronic progressive communicable disease, of viral origin, caused by one of two related retroviruses (HIV-1 and HIV-2). It produces a wide range of clinical manifestations related to defects in cell-mediated immunity. A patient with cerebral toxoplasmosis is presented. In this case the prognosis and survival depend on the appropriate diagnosis and effective treatment. It is considered of interest to comment on the main clinical aspects to contribute to the early detection in its primary level; and also to a better general treatment, especially for internationalist doctors who give their services in countries where AIDS is the leading cause of morbidity and mortality.Downloads
Downloads
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Authors who have publications with this journal agree to the following terms:
- Authors will retain their copyright and assign to the journal the right of first publication of their work, which will simultaneously be subject to a Creative Commons License / Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0) that allows third parties to share the work as long as its author and first publication in this journal are indicated.
- Authors may adopt other non-exclusive license agreements for distribution of the published version of the work (e.g., depositing it in an institutional repository or publishing it in a monographic volume) as long as the initial publication in this journal is indicated.
- Authors are allowed and encouraged to disseminate their work through the Internet (e.g., in institutional telematic archives or on their web page) before and during the submission process, which can produce interesting exchanges and increase citations of the published work. (See The effect of open access).