loading
Papers Papers/2022 Papers Papers/2022

Research.Publish.Connect.

Paper

Paper Unlock

Authors: Fachrur Razi ; Musofa Rusli ; Muhammad Vitanata Arfijanto ;  Bramantono ; Usman Hadi and Erwin Astha Triyono

Affiliation: Universitas Airlangga, Indonesia

Keyword(s): Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, Antiretroviral, Human immunodeficiency virus, secondary infection, Varicella-zooster virus

Abstract: Human immunodeficiency virus and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome infections are major problems in Indonesia, and antiretroviral therapy can reduce morbidity and mortality. The incidence of Varicella-Zoster Virus infection increases with worsening immune function; therefore, early diagnosis, proper management, and early detection of Human immunodeficiency virus infection may inhibit acquired immunodeficiency syndrome progression. A woman aged 27 was admitted to the out-patient unit with blistered skin from one week before hospitalization. She was in a weak condition, and the skin appeared to have pus-filled bullae, partially crusted and visibly eroded with pus. She had a moderate fever, which worsened for one week to 39°C. She suffered from painful urination and bowel movements in the last one week when exposed to skin lesions around the genitals. She was diagnosed with Human immunodeficiency virus because of weight loss, chronic diarrhea, sprue, oris candidiasis, two-month fever, positive Human immunodeficiency virus rapid test; positive 3-method test and Cluster of Differentiation 4 cell count 17%. The Tzanck test showed the patient was positive with giant cells. Varicella diagnosis was clinically established, but positive Tzanck test, viral or Polymerase Chain Reaction cultures were not performed due to limited cost. According to the results of physical examination and laboratory examination, the patient was diagnosed with varicella with the complication of a secondary infection. Her condition improved during the treatment. Her prognosis improved, but she might later have herpes zoster risk (More)

CC BY-NC-ND 4.0

Sign In Guest: Register as new SciTePress user now for free.

Sign In SciTePress user: please login.

PDF ImageMy Papers

You are not signed in, therefore limits apply to your IP address 3.135.207.129

In the current month:
Recent papers: 100 available of 100 total
2+ years older papers: 200 available of 200 total

Paper citation in several formats:
Razi, F.; Rusli, M.; Arfijanto, M.; Bramantono.; Hadi, U. and Triyono, E. (2018). Varicella-Infected Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome Patient with Secondary Infection. In Proceedings of the International Meeting on Regenerative Medicine - IMRM; ISBN 978-989-758-334-6; ISSN 2184-3635, SciTePress, pages 440-447. DOI: 10.5220/0007322804400447

@conference{imrm18,
author={Fachrur Razi. and Musofa Rusli. and Muhammad Vitanata Arfijanto. and Bramantono. and Usman Hadi. and Erwin Astha Triyono.},
title={Varicella-Infected Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome Patient with Secondary Infection},
booktitle={Proceedings of the International Meeting on Regenerative Medicine - IMRM},
year={2018},
pages={440-447},
publisher={SciTePress},
organization={INSTICC},
doi={10.5220/0007322804400447},
isbn={978-989-758-334-6},
issn={2184-3635},
}

TY - CONF

JO - Proceedings of the International Meeting on Regenerative Medicine - IMRM
TI - Varicella-Infected Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome Patient with Secondary Infection
SN - 978-989-758-334-6
IS - 2184-3635
AU - Razi, F.
AU - Rusli, M.
AU - Arfijanto, M.
AU - Bramantono.
AU - Hadi, U.
AU - Triyono, E.
PY - 2018
SP - 440
EP - 447
DO - 10.5220/0007322804400447
PB - SciTePress