Does benznidazole improve clinical status and reduce parasitemia in an HIV-infected patient with reactivated Chagas' disease?
Direct microscopic examination of blood for T. cruzi can be a late finding in Chagas' reactivation in immunocompromised patients, but benznidazole treatment remains effective.
We report a human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected man with chronic Chagas' disease who developed a congestive heart failure that could not be clinically controlled. Endomyocardial biopsy revealed severe myocarditis and the xenodiagnosis result was positive, but Trypanosoma cruzi by direct microscopic examination of the blood was found only four months after the symptoms had started. Treatment with benznidazole was effective in reducing parasitemia, stabilizing the clinical status, and controlling tissue damage related to the parasite. Although the finding of T. cruzi trypomastigotes by direct microscopic examination of the blood has been considered the mark of Chagas' reactivation in immunocompromised patients with chronic disease, in this case it was a late finding.
Sartori et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
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