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Adherence in HIV Disease: How One Person Keeps on Track
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Fast and Easy HIV Testing
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Communicating HIV Treatment Side Effects with Your Doctor
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Making The Decision To Start HIV Therapy
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HIV and Anemia: An Overlooked Danger
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Sticking to It: An HIV Patient Discusses Adherence
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HIV Medicines and Cholesterol: Is There a Link?
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Update on Lipodystrophy in HIV
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Dealing with Wasting in HIV Disease
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One Man Faces the Challenges of Cholesterol and HIV
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HIV and Anemia: One Patient's Story
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Lipodystrophy in HIV Disease
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Why Adherence Matters for Antiretrovirals
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In the United States, more than 733,000 people have AIDS, and an estimated one to two million people have HIV infection without the symptoms of AIDS.
Internationally, since the AIDS epidemic began, more than 16 million deaths have been attributed to AIDS. The current estimate of worldwide disease prevalence is more than 33 million HIV infections. Ninety-five percent of these cases are in developing countries, generally in sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia.
Most HIV infections still occur in men; however, the frequency of infection in women is increasing, especially in developing countries. In the United States, fewer than 16% of all HIV cases are in women, whereas worldwide an estimated 46% of all HIV patients are women.
The cause of primary AIDS is infection with the HIV virus, transmitted via infected blood or body fluids. Methods of transmission of the virus include unprotected sex, especially anal intercourse; occupational needle stick or body fluid splash, which has an estimated transmission rate of less than 0.3%; sharing of needles in drug abuse; and receiving contaminated blood products.
Opportunistic infections occur in individuals whose CD4 count is less than 200 cells/mm3 and those not taking preventative drugs.
Symptoms of AIDS include:
Almost 30% of people with AIDS develop peripheral neuropathy, causing tingling, numbness, and weakness in the arms and legs due to nerve damage. If severe, peripheral neuropathy can cause difficulty walking. Several drugs used to treat people with AIDS can contribute to the development of peripheral neuropathy.
Several opportunistic infections experienced by people with AIDS involve the nervous system. Progressive multifocal leucoencephalopathy (PML) is a serious viral infection of the brain, most often caused by the JC virus. PML is fatal in more than 90% of cases within six months of diagnosis. Nearly 4% of people with AIDS, especially those with T-cell counts below 100, will develop the disease. Meningitis is an infection of the lining of the spinal cord and brain, and also occurs in some people with AIDS. Cryptococcus, a fungus that normally occurs in the soil and seldom affects persons with intact immune systems, can cause recurring meningitis in people with AIDS whose T-cell count is below 100. The common parasite Toxoplasma gondii often present in cat feces, raw meat, raw vegetables, and the soil can also cause encephalitis, or inflammation of the brain, in AIDS patients. Shingles is a painful nerve inflammation caused by a reactivation of the herpes varicella zoster virus, the same virus that causes chicken pox. Although not directly linked to HIV, shingles seems to occur more frequently in people with AIDS.
Other neurological conditions associated with AIDS include depression, occurring at any time during the disease, and dementia, which sometimes occurs in the later stages of AIDS. Depression can stem from living with a chronic and progressive disease. AIDS-related dementia involves problems with thinking, memory, and usually also with controlling the arms and legs, and can stem from direct infection in the brain with the HIV virus. In the initial stages of the pandemic, almost 20% of persons with AIDS developed severe dementia. With the development of combination antiviral drugs, the rate of severe dementia in AIDS has been reduced by more than half. The number of persons with HIV and milder dementia has increased, however, as people with HIV live longer.
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Author Info: Greiciane Gaburro Paneto, Brenda Wilmoth Lerner RN, Iuri Drumond Louro MD, PhD, The Gale Group Inc., Gale, Detroit, Gale Encyclopedia of Neurological Disorders, 2005 |