311 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
Neuropsychological Changes in a Prospectively Followed Cohort of Intravenous Drug Users with and without HIV
We followed a cohort of 223 intravenous drug users (99 HIV and 124 HIV+) for up to 3.5 years, examining change in performance over time as a function of HIV status, disease severity, and neurological signs and symptoms. Analyses were performed by applying generalized estimating equations (GEE) to regression analyses with repeated measures, and controlled for age, education, and length of substance use. None of the subjects had AIDS at baseline. There were 147 men (85 HIV+ and 62 HIV) and 76 women (39 HIV+ and 37 HIV). Memory performance was worse in the HIV+ than HIV− women. In the men, performance on the memory, executive, language, and attention factors improved significantly overtime, but this improvement was attenuated in the HIV men for the attention and orientation factors. In the HIV+ women. AIDS was associated with worsening performance on attention tests. The presence or onset of clinically significant neurological findings was associated with poorer language and motor speed performance. In the HIV+ men, memory performance was worse when the CD4 count fell below 200: it declined over time in men with AIDS but not in those without. A learning effect for language was attenuated in men who developed AIDS. The presence or development of a clinically significant neurological sign was associated with poorer memory, executive, language, attention, and motor speed performance. Our findings parallel those that we previously reported in a prospectively followed cohort of gay men. In combination, our studies of gay men and IDU cohorts suggest that (a) HIV can affect cognition early, even when the patient is medically asymptomatic; (b) cognitive difficulties worsen as the severity of HIV infection increases; and (c) the advent of clinically significant neurologic signs is associated with progression to more severe cognitive deficits. Our data suggest that the neurological and neuropsychological changes are both manifestations of the central effect of HIV on the CNS
Covid-19, Ebola, and HIV - Leveraging Lessons to Maximize Impact
As researchers who have long experience with HIV/AIDS prevention, vaccines, and therapies, some of whom also have experience with Ebola, we believe it is critical to build the response to the Covid-19 pandemic on lessons from the HIV pandemic and recent Ebola outbreaks
Evaluation of HIV Protease Inhibitor Use and the Risk of Sudden Death or Nonhemorrhagic Stroke
Concerns have arisen about possible effects of protease inhibitors (PIs) on cardiac conductivity. We found no significant association between current or recent PI exposure and sudden death or nonhemorrhagic stroke (adjusted rate ratio, 1.22; 95% confidence interval, .95-1.57), whereas cumulative exposure to PIs was associated with an increased risk (adjusted rate ratio, 1.06 per year of exposure; 95% confidence interval, 1.01-1.11
Internet-based search of randomised trials relevant to mental health originating in the Arab world
BACKGROUND:
The internet is becoming a widely used source of accessing medical research through various on-line databases. This instant access to information is of benefit to busy clinicians and service users around the world. The population of the Arab World is comparable to that of the United States, yet it is widely believed to have a greatly contrasting output of randomised controlled trials related to mental health. This study was designed to investigate the existence of such research in the Arab World and also to investigate the availability of this research on-line.
METHODS:
Survey of findings from three internet-based potential sources of randomised trials originating from the Arab world and relevant to mental health care.
RESULTS:
A manual search of an Arabic online current contents service identified 3 studies, MEDLINE, EMBASE, and PsycINFO searches identified only 1 study, and a manual search of a specifically indexed, study-based mental health database, PsiTri, revealed 27 trials.
CONCLUSION:
There genuinely seem to be few trials from the Arab world and accessing these on-line was problematic. Replication of some studies that guide psychiatric/psychological practice in the Arab world would seem prudent
Recommended from our members
Risk of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1-Related Neurologic Disease in a Cohort of Intravenous Drug Users
Background: Although the proportion of cases of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome related to intravenous drug use has increased dramatically over the past decade, there has been no longitudinal examination of primary neurologic disease in this group. Objective: To study the development of neurologic disease in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)—negative and HIV-positive men and women who were intravenous drug users over a 3.5-year period. Design: Prospective observational cohort study. Setting: Subjects were recruited from an infectious disease clinic at a New York City Hospital or from a methadone maintenance program. Participants: Ninety-nine HIV-negative (62 men and 37 women) and 124 HIV-positive (85 men and 39 women) intravenous drug users volunteered. Main Outcome Measure: The development of clinically significant manifestations in six neurologic domains. Results: With multivariate adjustment for current and past substance abuse, age, education, and head injury, we examined the odds of developing HIV-related neurologic disease. Extrapyramidal signs and reduced motor ability became increasingly apparent over time in HIV-infected men as their CD4 cell count declined and as the subjects developed the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. Fewer neurologic signs were seen in the women. Conclusions: The impact of HIV infection among intravenous drug users parallels that in homosexual men and is independent of alcohol and other drug use
Lipid Profiles in HIV-Infected Patients Receiving Combination Antiretroviral Therapy: Are Different Antiretroviral Drugs Associated with Different Lipid Profiles?
Levels of triglycerides (TG), total cholesterol (TC), low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-c), and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-c), as well as the TC:HDL-c ratio, were compared in patients receiving different antiretroviral therapy regimens. Patients receiving first-line regimens including protease inhibitors (PIs) had higher TC and TG levels and TC:HDL-c ratios than did antiretroviral-naive patients; patients receiving 2 PIs had higher levels of each lipid. Ritonavir-containing regimens were associated with higher TC and TG levels and TC:HDL-c ratios than were indinavir-containing regimens; however, receipt of nelfinavir was associated with reduced risk of lower HDL-c levels, and receipt of saquinavir was associated with lower TC:HDL-c ratios. Patients receiving nonnucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitors had higher levels of TC and LDL-c than did antiretroviral-naive patients, although the risk of having lower HDL-c levels was lower than that in patients receiving a single PI. Efavirenz was associated with higher levels of TC and TG than was nevirapin
Epidemiology of HIV Infection in Large Urban Areas in the United States
Background: While the U.S. HIV epidemic continues to be primarily concentrated in urban area, local epidemiologic profiles may differ and require different approaches in prevention and treatment efforts. We describe the epidemiology of HIV in large urban areas with the highest HIV burden. Methods/Principal Findings: We used data from national HIV surveillance for 12 metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) to determine disparities in HIV diagnoses and prevalence and changes over time. Overall, 0.3 % to 1 % of the MSA populations were living with HIV at the end of 2007. In each MSA, prevalence was.1 % among blacks; prevalence was.2 % in Miami, New York, and Baltimore. Among Hispanics, prevalence was.1 % in New York and Philadelphia. The relative percentage differences in 2007 HIV diagnosis rates, compared to whites, ranged from 239 (San Francisco) to 1239 (Baltimore) for blacks and from 15 (Miami) to 413 (Philadelphia) for Hispanics. The epidemic remains concentrated, with more than 50 % of HIV diagnoses in 2007 attributed to male-to-male sexual contact in 7 of the 12 MSAs; heterosexual transmission surpassed or equaled male-to-male sexual transmission in Baltimore, Philadelphia, and Washington, DC. Yet in several MSAs, including Baltimore and Washington, DC, AIDS diagnoses increased among men-who-have sex with men in recent years. Conclusions/Significance: These data are useful to identify local drivers of the epidemic and to tailor public health effort
Recommended from our members
Neurologic and Neuropsychological Manifestations of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infection in Intravenous Drug Users without Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome. Relationship to Head Injury
We examined 99 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)—negative and 122 HIV-positive intravenous drug users (IVDUs) without acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) to determine whether HIV-positive IVDUs had more neurologic and neuropsychological impairment than their HIV-negative counterparts. Controlling for age, education, drug use, history of head injury, and interactions between head injury and HIV status and drug use, HIV-positive subjects had more extrapyramidal signs and frontal release signs. These findings persisted when asymptomatic HIV-positive subjects without systemic signs of infection and HIV-negative subjects were compared. Neurologic findings were more severe in those with more systemic illness. Among those reporting a history of head injury with loss of consciousness, neuropsychological performance was significantly worse in the HIV-positive subjects, and this increased with severity of illness. This was not true in the group without head injury, suggesting an interaction between history of head injury and the seropositive state. No relationship was noted between head injury and either drug use or HIV state. Therefore, subtle neurologic and neuropsychological abnormalities may precede clinical evidence of AIDS in IVDUs and may be more evident in those with head injury
Recommended from our members
Family Planning and the Millennium Development Goals
The United Nations' (UN's) eight Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) (1) are widely accepted as the primary path to alleviating poverty worldwide. This month, world leaders convene to assess progress toward these goals (2). In the countdown to the MDG 2015 deadline and amid protracted economic recession, we need the most efficient, effective, and evidence-based means to accelerate progress toward all MDGs. Challenges must be considered in concert, and solutions must provide multidimensional dividends for the world's poor, or we risk unwisely dividing limited resources and diluting their impact. As authors from diverse communities, we emphasize here the influence that investments in rights-based family planning can have on achieving the MDGs
- …