West Nile virus (WNV) is a mosquito-borne Flavivirus (family Flaviviridae), maintained in an enzootic cycle between birds as amplifying hosts and mosquito vectors. While WNV exposure in humans frequently remain subclinical, a febrile illness called West Nile fever occurs in about 20% and neuroinvasive disease in less than 1% of the affected individuals. For the last two decades, WNV has caused outbreaks of severe neuroinvasive disease in humans and horses in Europe, the Mediterranean Basin and emerged in the American continent. Although, previous serosurveillance reports have revealed human WNV exposure in various regions in Turkey; well-characterized clinical cases have only been reported after 2009-2010. In this report, a case of WNV encephalitis caused by a Lineage 1 virus strain and identified in Ankara province, Central Anatolia, Turkey, was presented. An 87 year-old woman with a history of hypertension and a recent febrile episode was admitted to Hacettepe University Hospital in late May 2012, with altered consciousness, myoclonic jerks in facial muscles and left extremity. Hyponatremia and increased alanine and aspartate aminotransferase levels were noted in blood analyses. Initial electroencephalogram (EEG) demonstrated diffuse slow waves. Areas of restricted diffusion in right dorsal thalamus was observed in cranial magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Despite supportive therapy, the patient's neurological condition worsened. Follow-up EEG displayed paroxysmal lateralizing epileptiform discharges (PLEDs) in the right hemisphere and T2-hyperintense lesions in the right temporoparietal cortex, insula and thalamus with components of cytotoxic and vasogenic edema were observed in MRI. A cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)-serum pair was evaluated to identify potential causes of encephalitis. CSF biochemical and microscopic findings were within normal limits except for decreased glucose levels. Bacterial, mycobacterial and fungal cultures, antigen assays and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) employed for Herpes simplex virus types 1 and 2 were negative. Commercial and in house assays for WNV, tick-borne encephalitis virus, Toscana virus (TOSV) antibodies revealed TOSV IgG in serum. Previously described nested PCRs targeting WNV envelope glycoprotein and phlebovirus consensus sequences demonstrated WNV positive results in serum and CSF, which were further characterized via cycle sequencing of amplicons as WNV Lineage 1 Clade 1a. Four serum samples obtained within 23 days after the diagnosis were negative for viral RNA and specific antibodies via commercial assays and WNV plaque reduction neutralization assay. During follow-up with supportive therapy and anti-epileptics, the patient's general and neurological condition improved mildly and control EEG and MRI demonstrated regression of previous lesions. However, the patient passed away on the 10th week of hospital admission due to nosocomial infections. These findings confirmed the inital data which indicated the circulation of WNV Lineage 1 strains in Central Anatolia, Turkey...
The first HIV/AIDS case has been reported in 1985 in Turkey, and since then 8238 cases have registered until June 2014 according to the records of Turkish Ministry of Health. The aim of this retrospective study was to evaluate the epidemiological data and clinical features of HIV/AIDS patients admitted to our center. A total of 255 HIV-infected patients admitted to our clinic between January 1986 and January 2013, whose data obtained from file records, were included in the study. Most of the patients were male (193/255, 75.6%) and Turkish citizens (216/255, 84.7%), with the mean age of 38.0 ± 11.6 (age range: 19-80) years. Approximately 25.4% (46/181) were university graduates. The most frequent route of transmission was through a heterosexual intercourse (161/255, 63.1%). In our study group, there were 34 men who had sex with men, and the majority of these cases (n= 26, 76.5%) were diagnosed in or after the year 2006, while 23.5% (n= 8) before 2006. This difference was found statistically significant (p< 0.05). The reasons that led patients for diagnosis were the presence of clinical symptoms such as diarrhea, lymphadenopathy and fever in 30.7%, and personal curiosity because of unprotected/risky sexual intercourse in 21.3% of the cases. Initial CD4(+) T lymphocyte counts could be reached for 237 cases, and the median value was calculated as 260 (range: 3-1183) cells/mm(3). Among these patients, CD4(+) T cell count was below 200/mm3 in 40.1% (95/237), and above 500/mm3 in 22.8% (54/237). The mean CD4(+) lymphocyte count on first admission was 240/mm(3) for those admitted before the year 2006 (n= 107) and 375/mm3 for those admitted after 2006 (n= 130) (p< 0.005). HIV-RNA loads could be reached for 203 cases on admission, and the median value was calculated as 67.200 copies/ml. Nearly half of the cases (91/203, 44.8%) had high viral load (≥ 100.000 copies/ml). The disease could be categorized in 246 cases, 54.1% were HIV-positive and 45.9% were in AIDS stage. Patients diagnosed after 2006 had lower rate of AIDS when compared to the patients diagnosed before 2006 (33.6% vs. 60.7%, respectively; p< 0.005). Two hundred patients were followed up more than three months (median: 41 months), and 138 patients (of them 79 were HIV-positive, and 59 were in AIDS stage) were still in follow up at the end of study period. Throughout the follow-up, 29 cases (29/255, 11.4%) had died. It was concluded that, the surveillance of data from HIV/AIDS patients would be beneficial to determine and predict the complications of the disease.
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