Title: NEUROLOGICAL COMPLICATIONS OF HIV INFECTION : ZIMBABWE 2005
1NEUROLOGICAL COMPLICATIONS OF HIV INFECTION
ZIMBABWE 2005
2Department of Medicine College of Health Sciences
,
Harare
Jens Mielke
3Epidemiology of HIV in Zimbabwe
- 2/3 of the people in the world living with HIV
live in sub-Saharan Africa,
- 2 million people in Zimbabwe HIV
- 24.6 of adults 15-49 are HIV
- life expectancy in Zimbabwe
- 52 years in 1990 / 34 years in 2005.
- In 2003, 170 000 people in Zimbabwe died of AIDS.
- 66.6 of HIV-1-infected women were infected with
subtype C, 48.3 with subtype A, and 33.3 with
subtype B
4Healthcare resources
- the worlds slowest growing economy (-3.1
growth in 2004)
- little public funding available for HIV care.
- For political reasons excluded from many US
based funding programmes for roll-out
- antiretroviral drug rollout programmes are not
yet treating significant numbers of patients
5Healthcare resources
- However urban and rural health care
infrastructures in place
- Active collaborative HIV research prevention,
treatment and complications
- High awareness at government and medical school
of priorities
- 90 of hospital admissions in internal medical
and paediatric services are HIV infected
6Status of Antiretrovirals
- In 2004 ARVs first offered in the public sector,
in dedicated opportunistic disease clinics
- but the majority of recipients of ARVs are
purchasing them privately and are receiving
treatment from private sector
- In 2005, 6000 of the 290 000 people who need to
be on treatment are receiving treatment
7Status of Antiretrovirals
- combination generic antiretroviral medications at
lower cost have accelerated the use of ARVs
considerably
- There are published national ARV use guidelines,
- the mainstay of therapy is a combination drug
(stavudine, lamivudine and nevirapine).
- Protease inhibitors are included in second line
therapy
8Epidemiology of HIV opportunistic diseases
- Little systematic review
- tuberculosis the commonest opportunistic disease
by far
- 90 of tuberculosis cases are pulmonary, but
extrapulmonary (pleural, lymph node, peritoneal,
pericardial, ileal and meningeal) do occur more
commonly than in non-HIV infected individuals
9Epidemiology of HIV opportunistic diseases
- Other opportunistic diseases probably present
with roughly the same frequency as elsewhere,
- important exceptions
- Kaposis sarcoma (which is possibly commoner),
- cryptococcal meningitis (which is the commonest
CNS opportunistic infection) and
- toxoplasmosis encephalitis (which is relatively
uncommon).
10Epidemiology of Neurological Opportunistic
Infections
- Meningitis
- increased dramatically since the onset of the HIV
pandemic
- outcome of meningitis is seriously altered by the
presence of HIV infection, with in-hospital
mortality exceeding 60 for patients with
bacterial and tuberculous meningitis in Zimbabwe
11Epidemiology of Neurological Opportunistic
Infections
- Cryptococcal meningitis remains the commonest
cause of adult meningitis
- 45 cryptococcus neoformans, 16 pyogenic (mainly
streptococcus pneumoniae), 12 tuberculous, the
remainder an unidentified mixed bag of
mononuclear meningitis presumably viral and
partially treated bacterial meningitis).
12Epidemiology of Neurological Opportunistic
Infections
- since 2003 fluconazole has been available in the
public sector,
- 960 patients treated at one referral centre but
very poor follow-up and re-prescription rate
(on ARVs. - Immune reconstitution syndromes are a serious
complication of antiretroviral therapy.
13Epidemiology of Neurological Opportunistic
Infections
- Cryptoccocoma presenting as an intracranial mass
lesion,
- cryptococcal myelitis presenting as an acute
spinal cord syndrome
- cryptococcal meningitis in children all
routinely seen
- Complications of cryptococcal meningitis seen
include optic neuritis and other cranial
mononeuropathies, cerebrovascular accident and
hydrocephalus
14Intracranial mass lesions
- MRI scan since 1995
- stereotactic biopsy (and therefore frequently
histological diagnosis) remains unavailable
- Polymerase chain reaction diagnosis for viral
agents is not available.
- likely that toxoplasma encephalitis and
tuberculoma are similar to published results from
South Africa , (toxoplasmosis less common than
tuberculoma as compared to opposite findings in
the northern hemisphere). - Bacterial abscesses and as a distant fourth
primary CNS lymphoma make up the remainder
15Spinal cord disease
- acute presentation
- vertebral tuberculosis
- transverse myelitis (sometimes zoster)
- Spinal meningitis (TB, cryptococcal)
- Intraspinal (intramedullary or extradural)
lymphoma
- Chronic / subacute
- progressive radiculopathy
- vacuolar myelopathy
- Syphilis not common (widespread penicillin use)
16Peripheral Neuropathy
- Distal symmetrical peripheral neuropathy
- drug induced neuropathy has become an important
differential diagnosis
- Acute demyelinating (postinfectious) and chronic
inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy
- Cranial neuropathies, (facial nerve palsy,
isolated third or sixth nerve palsy, mononeuritis
multiplex syndrome, peripheral mononeuropathies.)
17AIDS Dementia
- not systematically studied in Zimbabwe
- Anecdotal cases of AIDS dementia definitely exist
- Do patients survive long enough to become overtly
demented ?
18Conclusion
- adverse economic and political circumstances in
Zimbabwe seriously hamper efforts to counter the
effects of the HIV pandemic
- opportunities for learning about the neurological
manifestations of HIV and associated
opportunistic diseases continue.
- co-existence of AIDS victims naïve to ARVs and
treated groups,
- late presentations of opportunistic diseases,
- high prevalences of fungal and bacterial
diseases