Arch Intern Med
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We studied five patients with hemophilia A in the age range of 18 to 64 years who were infected with human immunodeficiency virus and who developed immune thrombocytopenia. The clinical course of immune thrombocytopenia in relation to human immunodeficiency virus infection and the patients' responses to splenectomy and immune variables were determined. All five patients developed antibody to human immunodeficiency virus 6 to 60 months (median, 24 months) before the onset of thrombocytopenia, and two patients became human immunodeficiency virus antigenemic (one patient at the onset of immune thrombocytopenia and the other 60 months after the onset of immune thrombocytopenia [24 months after splenectomy]). ⋯ Because of the progression of immune thrombocytopenia, four of the five patients underwent splenectomy with preoperative high-dose intravenous immune globulin. All four had an excellent immediate response to splenectomy, with a rise in platelet count to more than 300 x 10(9)/L and sustained remission during postsplenectomy follow-up of 6 to 45 months. There was no significant drop in CD4 and CD8 counts after splenectomy, and all four patients remained clinically well.
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Fifty-four elderly patients with thermoregulatory failure were evaluated retrospectively. The most commonly associated cause was underlying sepsis, which occurred in 78% of cases. Underlying conditions that increased the incidence of hypothermia were hypoproteinemia (50%), cachexia (30%), and neuroleptic medications (21%), most commonly thioridazine. ⋯ The mortality rate was not affected by age, sex, or degree of hypothermia. We conclude that thermo-regulatory failure in the elderly can occur in warm as well as cold environments or climates. The development of hypothermia in elderly patients should be promptly treated as sepsis unless proven otherwise, in light of the poor prognosis of this condition.