Karp Christopher L, Auwaerter Paul G
Division of Molecular Immunology, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center and the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, OH 45229, USA.
Clin Infect Dis. 2007 Nov 1;45(9):1214-20. doi: 10.1086/522180. Epub 2007 Sep 21.
The morbidity, mortality, and social disruption caused by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) pandemic continue to weigh disproportionately on resource-poor regions of the tropics. As a result, the potential for significant epidemiological, biological, and clinical interactions between HIV and other tropical pathogens is great. An overview of the available data on tropical helminths, fungi, bacteria, and viruses is provided here; interactions between HIV and tropical protozoa are covered in a related mini-review in this issue of Clinical Infectious Diseases. Special attention is given to evidence relevant to the hypothesis that helminth coinfection plays a particularly important role in accelerating the pace of HIV pathogenesis in the tropics.
人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)大流行所导致的发病率、死亡率及社会混乱,在热带地区资源匮乏的区域持续产生着极为沉重的负担。因此,HIV与其他热带病原体之间存在重大流行病学、生物学及临床相互作用的可能性很大。本文提供了关于热带蠕虫、真菌、细菌及病毒的现有数据概述;HIV与热带原生动物之间的相互作用在本期《临床传染病》的一篇相关小型综述中有所涵盖。特别关注了与如下假说相关的证据,即蠕虫合并感染在加速热带地区HIV发病进程中起着尤为重要的作用。