Title: Clinical Manifestations of HIV infection
1Clinical Manifestationsof HIV infection
2Epidemiologic Triad of Disease
Host
Environment
Agent
3Risk of OI
- Degree of immunosuppression (CD4 counts)
- Exposure to pathogens in the environment
4Natural History of HIV Infection Without the Use
of Antiretroviral Therapy
Primary Infection
Death
Acute HIV syndrome Wide dissemination of
virus Seeding of lymphoid organs
1200 1100 1000 900 800 700 600 500 400 30
0 200 100 0
OpportunisticDiseases
Clinical latency
HIV/RNA Copies per ml Plasma
Constitutional Symptoms
CD4 T Lymphocyte Count (cells/mmm3)
0 3 6 9 12
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10
11
Years
Weeks
Source Fauci et al 1996.
5CD4 Cell Counts and Opportunistic Infections
6CD4 Cells Risk of OI
- CD4 cells gt500/?L Recurrent vaginal
candidiasis, PGL - CD4 cells 200-500/?L Herpes zoster, oral
candidiasis, cervical intraepithelial neoplasia,
Kaposi sarcoma, non-Hodgkins lymphoma. - CD4 cells 100-200/?L Pneumocystis carinii
pneumonia, cryptococcosis, AIDS dementia complex,
AIDS related wasting. - CD4 cells lt50/?L CMV retinitis, MAI,
Cryptosporidiosis, progressive multifocal
leukoencephalopathy, primary CNS lymphoma.
7Common OI in India
- Recurrent bacterial infections
- Tuberculosis
- Chronic diarrhoea
- Candidiasis
- Cryptococcosis
- Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia
- Toxoplasmosis
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9FREQUENCY OF OI - CMCH
10TB and AIDS
Lifetime Risk of TB
11Common clinical problems in HIV infection
- Prolonged fever
- Pulmonary syndromes
- Neurological syndromes
- Gastrointestinal syndromes
- HIV and the eye
12PROLONGED FEVER
- Is a common sign in HIV infection
- Usually caused by a treatable opportunistic
infection.
13Case study 1
- Mr. Vengaiah was diagnosed to have HIV infection
when he consulted his local GP for recurrent
genital ulceration. He had significant loss of
weight and appetite. He had noticed darkening of
skin and loose stools on and off. He also had
occasional headache. - On examination An emaciated individual,
temperature-380C, respiratory rate-24/min, Pulse
rate-100/min. Darkening of palms and soles and
generalized pruritic papular rash. Two 0.5 x 0.5
cm lymph nodes in the deep cervical region, a few
small axillary nodes. - RS Occ creps at bases. P/A mild
hepatosplenomegaly. CNS examination-no signs of
meningeal irritation, no papilloedema or focal
deficits. - CVS Normal
14- Hb 6.8 g,WBC Total count 4200 cells/mm3
Neutrophils 75, Lymphocytes 20, Eosinophils 3,
basophils 2. - LFT 1.7/1.3/5.6/2.3/ 54/34/465
- Chest x-ray - Bilateral hilar adenopathy.
- Sputum AFB - negative.
- Lymph node FNAC was non-diagnostic.
- Ultrasound of abdomen- multiple hypoechoic areas
in the liver and spleen, no lymph nodal masses. - Bone marrow smear and biopsy- no specific
lesions.
15- What is his WHO clinical stage?
- Based on his clinical stage, what differential
diagnosis would you consider in order of
probability?
16Differential diagnoses
- Disseminated tuberculosis
- Disseminated histoplasmosis
- Lymphomas
- Cryptococcosis
- Disseminated CMV
17CAUSES OF PROLONGED FEVER IN INDIA
- DISS. TB 43
- PULM. TB 16
- EXTRAPULM. TB 10
- PCP 7
- CRYPTOCOCCOSIS
- 10
- CER.TOXOPLASMA1
- CA PNEUMONIA 2
- AMOEB.L.ABSC 2
- DISSEM HISTO 1
- SINUSITIS 1
- SBP 1
- PYO.MENINGITIS 1
- MALARIA 1
18How will you manage?
- Liver biopsy
- Empirical ATT and watch for response
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20Pulmonary syndromesCase study 1
- 24 year-old man seropositive individual with oral
thrush, presented with low grade fever,
progressive dyspnea on exertion and dry cough for
2 weeks - Physical examination showed
- T 38.5C, RR 26/min, O2 saturation was 97 on
room air but decreased to 90 with minimal
exertion. - No cervical lymphadenopathy. Lung clear to
auscultation - CXR as shown
21Case study 1
- What is the differential Dx?
22Case study 1
- Differential Dx
- - Pneumocystis carinii Pneumonia
- - Miliary TB
- - Disseminated fungal infection
- - CMV infection
- - Bacterial e.g. Salmonella
23- What will you do?
- Send sputum for gram stain and acid fast
bacilli. - induced sputum- GMS stain,
Giemsa, Grocott - silver stain and
fluorescent antibody test and wait - OR
- a. Start empirical Rx for PCP and bacterial
pneumonia - b. Await other sputum examination results.
- c. If negative refer to a center with Fibreoptic
bronchoscopy and BAL facilities
24- Presumptive PCP Empirical Rx
- correct Rx in 72 ( CDC criteria HIV,
dyspnea, nonproductive cough, no previous
prophylaxis, had previous H/O PCP, CXR diffuse
interstitial disease with moderate hypoxemia ) - TMP-SMX at a dose of 15mg/kg of trimethoprim
in three divided doses. - Broad spectrum antibiotic cover for bacterial
pneumonia
25Patient worsens
- Check O2 saturation.
- If lt 85 and pO2 lt 70mmHg
- What do you do?
- Add steroids Prednisolone 40 mg BDx 5 days
- Prednisolone 20 mg BDx 5
days - Prednisolone 20 mg ODx 11
days
26- In severe or atypical cases Early FOB
- In slow or non-responding cases after empirical
Rx for 3-5 days FOB - FOB procedure of choice for Dx PCP
- Sensitivity of BAL gt95 if no Rx
- Trans bronchial biopsy is not necessary but may
be helpful for Dx of concomitant infections
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28Sensitive to bactrim
- Rapid desensitization
-
- Add alternative regimens
- Clindamycin Primaquine
29HAART
- Would you start immediately?
- If so, what regimen?
- What complications should you look for?
- Immediate IRIS
- Drug rash
- Late Hepatotoxicity
- Lipoatrophy
- Lactic acidosis
30Case study 2
- A 43 year old lady presents with high grade
fever, cough with purulent expectoration of 6
days duration and breathlessness. She was
diagnosed to be seropositive 5 years ago when she
was screened for blood donation. This is her 2nd
episode in 6 months .She has had multi dermatomal
herpes zoster in the past. - On examination she is tachpneic with a RR
30/mt, Temp104º F . Respiratory system
examination shows decreased breath sounds in the
right mammary and infra-axillary regions. - A chest X-ray is done.
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32What is your diagnosis?
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34- Bacterial Pneumonia
- Other rare differentials could be
- Tuberculosis
- Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia
- Cryptococcosis
- Cytomegalovirus
35How would you treat?
- Crystalline penicillin 20 lakhs IV Q6H for ten
days. - If sensitive to penicillin alternatives
- Cephalosporins
- Macrolides
- Quinolones
36 What else?
- Consider pneumococcal vaccine
- and HAART
37Case study 3
- A 25 year old man presents with a PUO of 3 months
duration. - On examination he is febrile Temp102 F
- He has large nodes in the axillary and
cervical regions. On examination of the abdomen
he has hepatosplenomegaly and respiratory system
reveals crackles diffusely bilaterally.
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39LNE
40What is your differential diagnosis?
- Disseminated tuberculosis
- Lymphoma
- Histoplasmosis
- Cryptococcosis
- Cytomegalovirus
- Mycobacterium avium intracellulare
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42CxR Findings in TB Patients with HIV Infection
Late HIV (severely immuno-compromised)
Early HIV
43What treatment would you start?
- Anti-tuberculous therapy
- HREZ
- INH 300mg
- Rifampicin 10mg/kg
- Pyrazinamide 20-25mg/kg
- Ethambutol 15-20mg/kg
- Duration9-12 months
44What regimen would you choose?
- d4T 3 TC Efavirenz
- AZT 3 TC Efavirenz
- If resource crunch how would you modify the
regimen? - Wait for 2 months till the intensive phase is
completed and then start d4T 3TCNVP - Modify the ATT-HREZ for 2/12 ensure sputum
negativity and give HE for 18 months
45Case 4
- 38 yr. male
- HIV infection diagnosed 98
- Pulmonary tuberculosis in Dec 01 on ATT.
TMP-SMX - PC Headache x 3 weeks confusion x 3 days
- O/E oral thrush, afebrile no neurological
deficits no neck stiffness
46Cryptococcosis
- Clinical features headache, fever subacute
onset seizures neck stiffness uncommon CD4
lt100 - CSF pleocytosis, ? protein, ? glucose normal in
20 - Diagnosis India ink, crypto antigen, fungal
cultures
47Cryptococcus neoformans
48Cryptococcal Meningitis
- Initial treatment Ampho B (0.7 mg/kg/d) ?
Flucytosine (100 mg/kg/d) x 2 wk - Fluconazole only in pt. with normal mental
status, CSF crypto antigen lt132 CSF WBC
gt20/mm3 - Maintenance therapy Fluconazole 400 mg/d x 8 wk
then 200 mg/d
49Case study 2
- 34 year old male diagnosed AIDS 1 year ago when
he had disseminated TB - now presents with fever, headache, vomiting
and left hemiparesis. - On exam Wasted, oral thrush, stupourous and left
hemiparesis with a UMN facial on the same side
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51TE Management
- Pyrimethamine (200 mg x 1 dose then 75-100
mg/day) sulfadiazine (4-6 gm/day) x 4-6 weeks - Consider biopsy if
- serology negative
- atypical neuroradilogy
- absence of improvement with empiric therapy in 2
weeks
52- A 57-year-old woman, admitted with progressive
drowsiness and a change in mental status.
Neurologic exam short attention span and
right-sided homonymous hemianopia - Discharge from the left ear canal showed AFB
- After 12 days of ATT and corticosteroids, the
patient became more alert. A test for HIV
positive, and the AFB were identified as M
tuberculosis - Final diagnosis Tuberculous mastoiditis and
cerebral tuberculoma
Reid and Keane. NEJM 2002 347 (23)
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54Case study 3
- Mr B a 36 year old male presented to his doc with
headache and vomiting. He - was diagnosed to have HIV infection 3 years
ago. He was given TE Rx with no improvement. - On exam he was well preserved
- CNS revealed no meningeal signs and exam was
otherwise unremarkable
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57Progressive Multifocal Leukoencephalopathy
- Multifocal demyelination caused by JC-virus
- Relatively rapidly progressive neurologic
syndrome over weeks or months - Cognitive dysfunction, ataxia, aphasia, cranial
nerve deficits, hemiparesis or quadriparesis, and
eventually coma - Typical CT abnormalities include single or
multiple hypodense, non-enhancing cerebral white
matter lesions
58GI manifestations
- Chronic diarrhea
- Odynophagia
- Jaundice
- Abdominal pain
59Causes of diarrhea
- Protozoa (70)
- Isospora (most common)
- Cryptosporidia
- Giardia
- Cyclospora
- Microsporidia
60Causes of diarrhea
- Bacteria(23)
- Shigella
- Salmonella
- Aeromonas
- Helminths (6)
- Strongyloides
- Viruses
- CMV
61Shigella
62Cryptosporidia
63Cyclospora
64CMV enteritis
65Microsporidia
66Protozoal pathogens
67Evaluation
- STAGE 1
- Stool culture
- Stool examination for parasites
- Saline Iodine
- Modified AFB
- Trichrome
68Evaluation
- STAGE 2
- Gastroscopic biopsy
- Colonoscopic biopsy
- H E stain
- AFB stain
- Giemsa
- AFB culture
- Duodenal fluid examination
69Evaluation
- STAGE 3
- Gastroscopic biopsy
- Colonoscopic biopsy
-
- Electron microscopy
70Empirical antibiotics
- May be tried where diagnostic facilities are not
available - Albendazole has been tried with some success in
Zambia - We have tried TMP/SMX Ds 2 bd for three weeks and
Cipro 750 mg bd for 1 week as empirical regimen
71Cytomegalovirus Retinitis (CMVR)
- Most common infection of the retina
- Seen when CD4 count below 100
- Asymptomatic
- Flashes, Floaters
- Field defects
72Lymphoma
- Proptosis
- EOM palsies
- Papilloedema
- ? No1 disease of the future
73Toxoplasmosis
- Protozoal infection
- Rare
- Diagnosis difficult
- Elevated yellowish lesions
- Media hazy
- Can be multi-focal
74Pneumocystis carini Choroiditis
- Mulifocal pale elevated choroidal lesions
- Slowly progressive
- Caused by opportunistic protozoa
- Suggests disseminated disease
- IV pentamidine