Term
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Definition
- worldwide
- disproportionately affects developing countries and people of color
- highest rates in US: DC, Puerto Rico, NY, FL, MD
- declines in mortality over last several years
- increase in cases due to IVDA and heterosexual contact
- decrease in cases due to homosexual contact
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Term
HIV1 transmission: main methods of transmission |
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Definition
- blood and body fluids
- sexual contacts
- isolated from semen, vaginal secretions
- IVDA (share needles)
- blood and blood product transfusion
- since serologic testing began in 1985, risk is VERY LOW
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Term
HIV1 transmission: what may increase risk of transmission aka infectivity factors and how to decrease the risk |
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Definition
- viral load (advanced or early HIV infection)
- genital ulcer disease and other STD's
- antiretroviral therapy may decrease transmission
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Term
HIV1 transmission: factors that increase acquisition aka susceptibility factors |
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Definition
- genital ulcer disease, other STD's
- lack of circumcision (foreskin has many dendritic cells)
- traumatic sex/rectal sex
- cervical ectopy
- chemokine receptor phenotype (CCR5)
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Term
HIV1 maternal fetal transmission: how to reduce, when it can occur, risk factors, how to lower risk |
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Definition
- w/o therapy, transmission 25-30% of time
- can occur in utero or blood contact at birth
- risk factors
- premature rupture of membranes
- chorioamnionitis
- low maternal CD4/high HIV RNA
- can transmit via breast milk
- lower risk with cesarean
- reduction via AZT for baby and mother
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Term
HIV: health care worker transmission |
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Definition
- needlestick is a very low risk (0.3%)
- risk factors
- parenteral>>mucosal (mouth, eye)>>non intact skin
- inoculum: viral titer and volume of blood
- needle type
- hollow bore needles aka needle to draw blood>solid bore aka suture needle
- large bore>small bore
- decrease risk with:
- antiretroviral therapy initiated within 24 hours
- glove use
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Term
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Definition
- first thing to increase along with HIV increase is HIV specific CD8 lymphocytes
- important part of cellular response to primary infection
- stimulated by MHC I
- CD4 lymphocytes
- function- facilitates activity of other CD4 cells, CD8 cells, NK cells, macrophages, B cells
- NK cells
- neutralizing (rise as HIV begins to level drop and level off) and non neutralizing Ab's
- there are also proteins involved from the innate immune response
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Term
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Definition
- HIV trapped in lymph node by follicular dendritic cells
- leads to infection of CD4 T cells (HALLMARK: CD4 cell depletion)
- infects macrophages (act as possible vehicle into CNS)
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Term
HIV pathogenesis: different mechanisms of CD4 depletion |
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Definition
- HIV mediated direct cytopathicity (single cell killing)
- HIV mediated syncytia formation with recruitment of non HIV infected individuals (innocent bystandard)
- virus specific immune responses
- super Ag effects
- apoptosis
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Term
HIV pathogenesis: intestinal CD4 cell depletion |
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Definition
- 2-4 weeks after infection the GALT can lose most of their CD4 cells (mainly memory CD4 cells)
- mucosal lining of GI carries disproportionately heavy viral load
- some CD4 cells become apoptotic while some appear to be killed by CD8 cells
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Term
HIV1: cellular immune defects |
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Definition
- decrease number of CD4 cells
- loss of skin test reactivity/delayed type hypersensitivity
- decreased proliferation to mitogens, alloAg, recall Ag's
- decrease in IL-2 production
- alteration in Th1/Th2 cytokine production and signaling pathways (more so towared Th2 profile)
- increase susceptibility to viral, fungal, and protozoal infections
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Term
HIV: humoral immune defects |
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Definition
- polyclonal gammopathy
- definition- nonspecific Ab response to multiple Ag's
- poor response to new immunogens (ex: pneumococcal vaccine)
- increased susceptibility to bacterial infections caused by encapsulated organisms
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Term
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Definition
- HIV1 Ab's
- screen via ELISA (serum or saliva) w/ false positve rate of 0.4% (very sensitive)
- confirmatory via western bloot or IFA (false positive rate of 0.005%)
- need specific HIV2 western blot
- HIV RNA/DNA
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Term
HIV1: classification of acute/primary infection |
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Definition
- occurs in 50-90% of seroconverters
- typically in 2-4 weeks after exposure
- infectious mononucleosis like illness
- may have viral meningitis
- early detection of HIV RNA
- prior to Ab, the "window" period
- early treatment may alter natural history of HIV infection
- important period of transmission for new infections
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Term
Critieria for CDC staging of HIV1 |
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Definition
- stage 1
- CD4 greater than 500
- clinical: no AIDS defining condition
- stage 2
- CD4 between 200 and 499
- clinical: no AIDS defining condition
- stage 3
- CD4 less than 200
- clinical: AIDS defining conditions
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Term
AIDS defining conditions: fungal |
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Definition
- Pneumocystitis jirovecii pneumonia
- candidiasis- esophagus, tracheobronchial
- cryptococcosis (extra pulmonary)
- histoplasmosis (extra pulmonary)
- coccidioidmycosis (extra pulmonary)
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Term
AIDS defining conditions: mycobacterial |
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Definition
- MAC infection
- M tuberculosis
- M kansasii
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Term
AIDS defining conditions: viral |
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Definition
- chronic mucocutaneous herpes simplex (oral, genital, perianal)
- CMV infection of major organs
- progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML, JC virus)
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Term
AIDS defining conditions: parasitic |
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Definition
- cerebral toxoplasmosis
- intestinal parasites
- cryptosporidiosis (protracted)
- isoporiasis
- extraintestinal strongyloidiasis
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Term
AIDS defining conditions: bacterial |
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Definition
- recurrent bacterial pneumonia
- recurrent Salmonella bacteria
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Term
Most AIDS secondary infections are the result of what |
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Definition
re emergence of latent infections |
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Term
HIV: secondary infections and what determines which ones you are at risk for |
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Definition
- risk related to degree of immunosuppression
- CD4 less than 200
- Pneumocystitis jirovecii pneumonia
- CD4 less than 100
- cryptococcal meningitis
- CMV infection of major organs
- MAC
- cerberal toxoplasmosis
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Term
HIV secondary malignancies |
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Definition
- Kaposi's sarcoma (HHV8 related)
- lymphoma (EBV related)
- non Hodgkin's lymphoma
- Burkitt's lymphoma
- primary CNS lymphoma
- cervical cancer (HPV related)
- squamous cell carcinoma of rectum (HPV related)
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Term
HIV1: neurologic disease manifestations |
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Definition
- CNS shows HIV encephalopathy (progressive dementia)
- peripheral neuropathy
- spinal cord disease
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Term
HIV1: manifestations other than secondary infections and malignancies |
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Definition
- wasting syndrome
- thrombocytopenia
- renal disease
- cardiomyopathy
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Term
HIV1 progression to AIDS: mean rate, who is faster, how determined |
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Definition
- median rate of progression if untreated is about 10 yrs
- determined by following cohorts of patients for which time of infection could be precisely determined
- homosexual cohorts
- blood or blood component recipients
- more rapid in neonates, elderly
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Term
HIV1 progression: role of genetic variants and tx
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Definition
- related to HLA type
- chemokine receptor phenotype (CCR5 variant)
- less severe with HIV2
tx delay progression |
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Term
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Definition
- CD4 count
- symptoms
- fever, chills, night sweats, weight loss
- oral candidiasis
- oral hairy leukoplakia (linear pattern on cheek, side of tongue)
- HIV RNA
- baseline HIV RNA level is independent predictor of survival
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Term
HIV1: long term non progressors (definition, signs) |
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Definition
- criteria (5-10% of HIV positive individuals)
- preservation of CD34 cell numbers for 10-15 yrs after infection
- undetectable HIV RNA
- preservation of lymph node architecture
- very strong CD8 T cell response
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Term
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Definition
- combination therapy superior to monotherapy
- more potent
- delays resistance
- start with CD4 less than 350 or 400 or HIV RNA PCR less 50,000-100,000
- monitor effectiveness via
- clinical evaluation
- CD4 counts
- plasma HIV RNA levels
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Term
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Definition
- maximize suppression of viral replication
- undetectable plasma HIV RNA level
- optimal preservation of immune function
- delay emergence of resistance
- foster patient compliance
- minimize side effects, drug interactions
- preserve future tx options
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Term
HIV: classes of antiretrovirals |
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Definition
- reverse transcriptase inhibitors
- nucleoside/nucleotide analogs (NRTI's) aka chain terminating agents
- non nucleoside RTI (NNRTI's)
- bind to enzyme
- cause confirmation change
- make reverse transcriptase inactive
- protease inhibitors
- integrase inhibitors
- fusion/entry inhibitors
- inhibitors of gp41 mediated fusion
- chemockine coreceptor antagonists (ex: inh. of CCR5)
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Term
HIV mechanism of resistance |
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Definition
- high rate of viral replication
- high mutation frequency
- failure of reverse transcriptase to correct transcription errors
- point mutations lead to changes in shape, size, or charge of active site
- increasing incidence of transmission of resistance
- accumulation of mutations lead to increase resistance
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Term
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Definition
- genotypic- characteristic codon mutations conferring resistance
- phenotypic- ability of virus to grow in vitro in presence of drug
- clinical- lack of clinical or virologic benefit in an individual patient (aka not getting better)
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Term
Antiretroviral therapy patient challenges |
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Definition
- adherence
- multidrug therapy, high pill burden
- inconvenient dosing schedules
- side effects
- complex drug interactions (P450)
- emergence of resistance
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Term
HIV: therapy complications |
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Definition
- lipodystrophy (fat redistribution)/lipoatrophy (loss of face fat)
- due to inhibition of mitochondrial DNA polymerase
- immune reconstitution syndrome
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Term
immune reconstitution syndrome (cause) |
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Definition
- presentation of infection or worsening of the manifestations after initiation of antiretrovrial therapy
- due to increases in CD4 cell number or percentage and a fall in HIV RNA
- causes worsening of opportunisitc infections: TB, MAC, CMV, PCP
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Term
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Definition
- cousneling, education
- barrier methods
- circumscision
- blood product screening
- therapy to prevent vertical transmission
- antiretroviral therapy and cesarean
- post exposure therapy: needlestick, sexual contact, delivery
- in the future, pre exposure px in high risk individuals and vaccines
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Term
Why is uncircumcision a risk in transmission of HIV |
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Definition
- foreskin full of dendritic cells
- persistent risk of transmission if never healed
- also decrease risk in genital ulcer if you get circumcised
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