Harris M J, Jeste D V, Gleghorn A, Sewell D D
Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Diego.
J Clin Psychiatry. 1991 Sep;52(9):369-76.
Psychiatric symptoms and disorders are becoming increasingly evident in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients. As psychotic symptoms may be severe and require immediate behavioral management, the authors sought to determine the frequency and clinical characteristics of new-onset psychosis not obviously attributable to substance abuse or delirium in these patients.
The authors reviewed the English-language literature since 1981 by means of the Index Medicus and MEDLINE for reports of new-onset psychosis in HIV-infected patients and also examined the charts of 124 HIV-infected patients who had been followed up at the San Diego Veterans Affairs Medical Center since 1984. Cases of substance-induced psychosis and delirium were excluded.
Results reflect a combination of cases from the authors' study and cases of new-onset HIV-associated psychosis reported in the literature (N = 31). Results of the initial neurologic evaluation, including computed tomography (CT) scan and examination of the CSF, were normal in a majority of patients (CT = 12 of 23 patients; CSF = 10 of 14 patients). Psychotic symptoms improved with neuroleptic treatment although side effects were frequently seen. In some patients (N = 12) psychosis was the presenting manifestation of HIV infection or acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. A proportion of patients (N = 7 [23%]), especially those with an abnormal CT and EEG at the time of presentation with psychosis, tended to have a relatively rapid deterioration in cognitive and medical status. Differences between studies in population and method made it impossible to determine the frequency of new-onset psychosis in the general HIV-infected population.
A common clinical feature noted in new-onset psychosis in HIV-infected patients was acute or subacute onset of symptoms, which included delusions, hallucinations, bizarre behavior, mood or affective disturbances, and mild memory or cognitive impairment. The etiological association of the HIV infection to the psychosis is yet to be established.
精神症状和精神障碍在人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)感染患者中日益明显。由于精神病性症状可能很严重,需要立即进行行为管理,作者试图确定这些患者中并非明显由药物滥用或谵妄引起的新发精神病的频率和临床特征。
作者通过医学索引和医学期刊数据库检索了自1981年以来的英文文献,以查找有关HIV感染患者新发精神病的报告,并检查了自1984年以来在圣地亚哥退伍军人事务医疗中心接受随访的124例HIV感染患者的病历。排除药物所致精神病和谵妄病例。
结果反映了作者研究中的病例与文献中报道的新发HIV相关精神病病例(N = 31)的综合情况。大多数患者的初始神经学评估结果,包括计算机断层扫描(CT)和脑脊液检查,均正常(CT检查的23例患者中有12例;脑脊液检查的14例患者中有10例)。使用抗精神病药物治疗后精神病性症状有所改善,尽管副作用常见。在一些患者(N = 12)中,精神病是HIV感染或获得性免疫缺陷综合征的首发表现。一部分患者(N = 7 [23%]),尤其是那些在出现精神病时CT和脑电图异常的患者,认知和医疗状况往往会相对迅速地恶化。由于研究人群和方法的差异,无法确定一般HIV感染人群中新发精神病的频率。
HIV感染患者新发精神病的一个常见临床特征是症状急性或亚急性发作,包括妄想、幻觉、怪异行为、情绪或情感障碍,以及轻度记忆或认知障碍。HIV感染与精神病之间的病因学关联尚未确立。