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- Title
HIV-1-assoziierte neurokognitive Störung.
- Authors
Eggers, C.
- Abstract
By restoring the immunological function the modern antiretroviral treatment of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) infection has considerably lowered the incidence of opportunistic infections. As opposed to the classical manifestations of HIV-induced immunosuppression the incidence and prevalence of HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND) has not noticeably decreased and HAND continues to be relevant in daily clinical practice. At present, HAND occurs in earlier stages of HIV infection, and the clinical course differs from that before the introduction of combination antiretroviral treatment (cART). The predominant clinical manifestation is a subcortical dementia with deficits in the domains attention, concentration and memory. Signs of central motor pathway lesions have become less frequent and less prominent. Prior to the advent of cART the cerebral dysfunction could at least partially be explained by the viral load and by virus-associated histopathological findings. In patients with at least partially successfully treated infections, this relationship no longer exists, but a plethora of poorly understood immunological and probably toxic phenomena are under discussion. This consensus paper summarizes the progress made in the last 12 years in the field of HAND and provides suggestions for the diagnostic and therapeutic management.
- Subjects
THERAPEUTICS; HIV infections; ANTIRETROVIRAL agents; IMMUNOSUPPRESSION; HIV infection complications; CLINICAL medicine
- Publication
Der Nervenarzt, 2014, Vol 85, Issue 10, p1280
- ISSN
0028-2804
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s00115-014-4082-y