id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt cord-354374-rtgjjglc C.G. Pollok, Richard Enteric viruses in HIV-related diarrhoea 2000-12-01 .txt text/plain 3488 191 37 Colonic CMV infection can occur in association with infection elsewhere in the GI tract including the oesophagus, which usually results in dysphagia and odynophagia, and the pancreatico-biliary tree, which results from AIDS-related cholangiopathy or pancreatitis and manifests as pain in the upper abdomen. However, with the exception of cytomegalovirus (CMV) and human herpes simplex virus (HSV), which are established aetiological agents of disease in the GI tract in patients with HIV, the role of other enteric viruses remains controversial. Between 44% and 82% of HIV patients with chronic diarrhoea have a pathogen that is readily identifiable using a well-established diagnostic protocol that includes stool culture, microscopy and histological examination of biopsies obtained by endoscopy of the upper and lower GI tract [1] [2] [3] [4] . • What role do non-CMV enteric viruses, particularly adenovirus, have in HIV-related diarrhoea? ./cache/cord-354374-rtgjjglc.txt ./txt/cord-354374-rtgjjglc.txt