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    J Int Assoc Physicians AIDS Care (Chic Ill). 2008 Mar-Apr;7(2):69-73. Epub 2008 Mar 4.

    Possible case of CNS Whipple's disease in an adolescent with AIDS.

    Patel SJ, Huard RC, Keller C, Foca M.

    Department of Pediatrics, Division of Pediatric Infectious Diseases, Coulumbia University Medical Center, New York, NY 10032, USA. sp2172@columbia.edu

    An adolescent with HIV/AIDS presented subacutely with progressive encephalopathy, spastic quadraplegia, and diarrhea. His brain biopsy was suggestive of central nervous system Whipple's disease, a disease rarely described in HIV patients. Due to overlapping, nonspecific symptoms associated with several opportunistic infections and to the difficulty in culturing the causative organism Tropheryma whipplei, Whipple's disease may be more common than previously suspected, and it is an important consideration in patients with AIDS.

    PMID: 18319513 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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