Rippeth Julie D, Heaton Robert K, Carey Catherine L, Marcotte Thomas D, Moore David J, Gonzalez Raul, Wolfson Tanya, Grant Igor
Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Diego School of Medicine, San Diego, California, USA.
J Int Neuropsychol Soc. 2004 Jan;10(1):1-14. doi: 10.1017/S1355617704101021.
Both HIV infection and methamphetamine dependence can be associated with brain dysfunction. Little is known, however, about the cognitive effects of concurrent HIV infection and methamphetamine dependence. The present study included 200 participants in 4 groups: HIV infected/methamphetamine dependent (HIV+/METH+), HIV negative/methamphetamine dependent (HIV-/METH+), HIV infected/methamphetamine nondependent (HIV+/METH-), and HIV negative/methamphetamine nondependent (HIV-/METH-). Study groups were comparable for age, education, and ethnicity, although the HIV-/METH- group had significantly more females. A comprehensive, demographically corrected neuropsychological battery was administered yielding a global performance score and scores for seven neurobehavioral domains. Rates of neuropsychological impairment were determined by cutoff scores derived from performances of a separate control group and validated with larger samples of HIV+ and HIV- participants from an independent cohort. Rates of global neuropsychological impairment were higher in the HIV+/METH+ (58%), HIV-/METH+ (40%) and HIV+/METH- (38%) groups compared to the HIV-/METH- (18%) group. Nonparametric analyses revealed a significant monotonic trend for global cognitive status across groups, with least impairment in the control group and highest prevalence of impairment in the group with concurrent HIV infection and methamphetamine dependence. The results indicate that HIV infection and methamphetamine dependence are each associated with neuropsychological deficits, and suggest that these factors in combination are associated with additive deleterious cognitive effects. This additivity may reflect common pathways to neural injury involving both cytotoxic and apoptotic mechanisms.
HIV感染和甲基苯丙胺依赖都可能与脑功能障碍有关。然而,关于HIV感染与甲基苯丙胺依赖并发的认知影响,人们所知甚少。本研究纳入了200名参与者,分为4组:HIV感染/甲基苯丙胺依赖组(HIV+/METH+)、HIV阴性/甲基苯丙胺依赖组(HIV-/METH+)、HIV感染/非甲基苯丙胺依赖组(HIV+/METH-)和HIV阴性/非甲基苯丙胺依赖组(HIV-/METH-)。尽管HIV-/METH-组女性明显更多,但各研究组在年龄、教育程度和种族方面具有可比性。实施了一套经过人口统计学校正的全面神经心理测试组合,得出一个整体表现分数和七个神经行为领域的分数。神经心理损害率由一个单独对照组的表现得出的临界分数确定,并在来自独立队列的更多HIV+和HIV-参与者样本中进行了验证。与HIV-/METH-组(18%)相比,HIV+/METH+组(58%)、HIV-/METH+组(40%)和HIV+/METH-组(38%)的整体神经心理损害率更高。非参数分析显示,各组的整体认知状态存在显著的单调趋势,对照组损害最小,HIV感染与甲基苯丙胺依赖并发组的损害患病率最高。结果表明,HIV感染和甲基苯丙胺依赖各自都与神经心理缺陷有关,并表明这些因素共同作用与累加的有害认知影响有关。这种累加性可能反映了涉及细胞毒性和凋亡机制的神经损伤共同途径。