Caroline L. Dodd
University of California, San Francisco
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Featured researches published by Caroline L. Dodd.
AIDS | 1991
Caroline L. Dodd; Deborah Greenspan; Mitchell H. Katz; Janice Westenhouse; David Feigal; John S. Greenspan
Candidiasis is the most common oral fungal infection seen in association with HIV infection. It may present in a number of clinical forms, including pseudomembranous and erythematous candidiasis. To determine whether erythematous candidiasis, like the pseudomembranous form, is predictive of the development of AIDS, we reviewed the records of 169 HIV-seropositive patients seen at clinic of the Oral AIDS Center, University of California, San Francisco who were diagnosed with pseudomembranous or erythematous (or both) forms of oral candidiasis at their first examination. Kaplan-Meier analysis showed a rapid rate of progression to AIDS (median, 25 months) and to death (median, 43.8 months) in all three groups. We conclude that erythematous candidiasis is as serious a prognostic indicator as pseudomembranous candidiasis. Because the erythematous form is more difficult to recognize and hence is underdiagnosed, efforts should be made to teach non-dental clinicians who care for HIV-infected patients to diagnose and treat this lesion.
Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology | 1992
Morten Schiødt; Caroline L. Dodd; Deborah Greenspan; Troy E. Daniels; David N. Chernoff; Harry Hollander; Diane W. Wara; John S. Greenspan
To describe the natural history of HIV-associated salivary gland disease, which is characterized by enlarged major salivary glands and/or xerostomia in HIV-infected persons, we assessed 22 patients at an initial and follow-up examinations (median span of examinations, 15 months). Sixteen patients (73%) had bilateral parotid gland enlargement, 17 had symptoms of dry mouth, and 11 had both conditions. Parotid gland enlargement remained unchanged in 10 patients, it progressed in 2, and it regressed in 4 during treatment with zidovudine or steroids. Those patients with parotid gland enlargement had a significantly lower mean stimulated parotid flow rate (0.27 ml/min/per gland) than a control group of HIV+ persons without salivary gland disease (0.48 ml/min/per gland) (p less than 0.05), whereas the mean unstimulated whole salivary flow rates did not did not differ significantly between the two groups. The mean salivary flow rate of the study group did not change during the observation period. When HIV-associated salivary gland disease was diagnosed, 5 patients (23%) had AIDS, and at follow-up 10 (46%) had AIDS. Seven of these had Kaposis sarcoma. The mean peripheral blood CD4 cell count was 280 and 225 per mm3 at the initial and follow-up examinations, respectively. The corresponding CD8 counts were 1138 and 900. The pathogenesis of HIV-associated salivary gland disease may include hyperplasia of intra-parotid lymphoid tissue. Because HIV-associated salivary gland disease can clinically resemble Sjögrens syndrome, the differential diagnosis of bilateral parotid enlargement should include HIV infection.
Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology | 1993
Gad S. Heinic; David A. Stevens; Deborah Greenspan; Laurie A. MacPhail; Caroline L. Dodd; Suzan Stringari; William Strull; Harry Hollander
Oropharyngeal candidiasis develops in up to 95% of patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. Oral fluconazole is frequently prescribed for persons who are human immunodeficiency virus-seropositive as initial or suppressive therapy for oropharyngeal and esophageal candidiasis or as suppressive therapy for cryptococcal meningitis. We report two cases of oropharyngeal candidiasis, caused by Candida albicans, which developed in two patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome who had taken fluconazole for extended periods. In addition to the clinical resistance we observed, isolates of the organism appeared to be resistant in vitro to fluconazole and ketoconazole.
Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 1996
Laurie A. MacPhail; Joan F. Hilton; Caroline L. Dodd; Deborah Greenspan
To determine whether daily use of nystatin pastilles can prevent initial outbreak or recurrence of oral candidiasis in HIV-infected patients and to identify factors associated with outbreaks during 20-week follow-up, a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial was conducted. Subjects were 128 HIV-infected men (aged 27-60 years) who either had had no documented episode of oral candidiasis in the previous year or had been clinically clear of oral candidiasis for at least 72 h before randomization. Study arms were two placebo pastilles, one nystatin (200,000 U) and one placebo pastille, or two nystatin pastilles daily for 20 weeks. The main outcome measure was time to oral candidiasis, as determined by potassium hydroxide (KOH) smear and fungal culture. A multivariate proportional hazards model showed that four factors were significant (p < 0.001) in predicting time to oral candidiasis: nystatin treatment (hazard ratio 0.59), history of oral candidiasis (3.58), Candida albicans carriage (2.79), and CD4 count at randomization (0.65). In this small group of subjects, nystatin appeared to be effective in delaying onset of oral candidiasis. Patients with CD4 counts < 200 who are carriers of C. albicans and have a history of oral candidiasis may be most likely to benefit from antifungal prophylaxis.
Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology | 1992
Caroline L. Dodd; Deborah Greenspan; Morten Schiødt; Troy E. Daniels; Jay H. Beckstead; Laurie A. MacPhail; Shelley Miyasaki; John S. Greenspan
In 4.4% of human immunodeficiency virus-associated non-Hodgkins lymphoma the presenting lesion is seen in the mouth. Often the lesion may clinically resemble a less sinister process, and a definitive diagnosis of lymphoma may be delayed. We describe three unusual cases of non-Hodgkins lymphoma, appearing intraorally in association with other oral lesions, in HIV-positive homosexual men. The three patients reported here were all diagnosed as having diffuse, large-cell malignant non-Hodgkins lymphoma. We performed Epstein-Barr virus DNA in-situ hybridization on our cases and Epstein-Barr virus DNA sequences were not seen. We review the pertinent literature and stress the importance of including non-Hodgkins lymphoma in the differential diagnosis of oral lesions in patients at risk of HIV infection.
Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology | 1993
Caroline H. Shiboski; Deborah Greenspan; Caroline L. Dodd; Troy E. Daniels
Celiac sprue, also called nontropical sprue, is a malabsorption syndrome with symptoms that are triggered mainly by gluten ingestion. Non-Hodgkins lymphoma of the gastrointestinal tract has been reported in patients with a long history of celiac sprue. This case report describes the occurrence of primary oral lymphoma in such a patient. This case is unusual because lymphomas associated with celiac sprue usually develop in the small intestine or in the stomach, and primary lymphoma in the mouth is itself uncommon.
British Dental Journal | 1993
Caroline L. Dodd; Deborah Greenspan; Gad S. Heinic; J.-P. Rabanus; John S. Greenspan
Cases of non-Hodgkins lymphoma (NHL) occurring in immunosuppressed patients, including those who are infected with the human immunodeficiency virus, may develop in areas other than the lymph nodes. In AIDS-associated NHL, about 5% of cases of extranodal NHL are intra-oral. This case report describes the presentation of malignant non-Hodgkins lymphoma in the mouth of a man who had AIDS. The lesion arose on separate occasions at three distinct sites, spontaneously regressing at each site prior to appearing at another intra-oral site
Journal of Clinical Periodontology | 1993
Caroline L. Dodd; James R. Winkler; Gad S. Heinic; Troy E. Daniels; Karen Yee; Deborah Greenspan
Journal of Oral Pathology & Medicine | 1993
Joseph A. Regezi; Laurie A. MacPhail; Troy E. Daniels; John S. Greenspan; Deborah Greenspan; Caroline L. Dodd; Francina Lozada-Nur; Gad S. Heinic; Henry Chinn; Sol Silverman; Louis S. Hansen
The Journal of Rheumatology | 1992
Morten Schiødt; Jane C. Atkinson; Deborah Greenspan; Philip C. Fox; Caroline L. Dodd; Troy E. Daniels; John S. Greenspan