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Cryptococcal pneumonia in AIDS: is cryptococcal meningitis preceded by clinically recognizable pneumonia?

Identification of cryptococcal infection while it is still in its pulmonary phase might improve the prognosis for patients with AIDS who contract cryptococcosis. Since cryptococcal pneumonia is infrequently diagnosed in the AIDS patient, especially compared with the frequency of diagnosis of cryptococcal meningitis, this retrospective study was designed to investigate the frequency of pulmonary complaints in the months before diagnosis of cryptococcal meningitis. The medical records of 18 patients diagnosed with cryptococcal meningitis were analyzed. Of 18 patients, 14 (78%) had respiratory symptoms during the 4-month period before meningitis appeared, as compared with nine of 18 (50%) at the time of diagnosis and four of 16 (25%) in the 4 months following diagnosis. Seven of the 14 cases of pulmonary disease prediagnosis were of unknown etiology; three were eventually diagnosed as cryptococcal infections during evaluation of the meningitis. The remaining eight infections were attributed to bacteria, respiratory viruses, or Pneumocystis carinii, although three of these cultures also contained yeast, presumed to be Candida species, which were not further examined. Our data suggest the importance of singling out AIDS patients who may have pulmonary cryptococcosis. Cryptocococcsis should be included in the differential diagnosis of pulmonary infection in HIV-positive patients with CD4+ lymphocyte counts < 200/mm3, and full identification of yeasts recovered from sputum or bronchoalveolar lavage fluid cultures should be done. A larger study should be undertaken to better define the incidence of clinically recognizable pulmonary cryptococcosis in AIDS patients.

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