Mycobacterium avium intracellulare (MAI) is an opportunistic human pathogen.
MAI is an important, if unusual, cause of pulmonary disease in patients with pre-existing lung damage.
In cases of profound immune suppression, for example in the terminal phase of AIDS, MAI causes a disseminated infection.
Clinical diagnosis is often difficult in patients who are already severely unwell. Characteristic features include fever and diarrhoea. It appears that the organism causes relatively little tissue damage.
MAI causes diarrhoea in up to 10% of HIV infected patients with CD4 counts less than 150/ml. Positive stool cultures may only indicate colonization with MAI, so jejunal biopsy may be required to determine if MAI is of pathogenic importance.
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