Quinn T C, Zacarias F R, St John R K
Laboratory of Immunoregulation, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Bethesda, Maryland.
Medicine (Baltimore). 1989 Jul;68(4):189-209. doi: 10.1097/00005792-198907000-00001.
With over 143,000 cases of AIDS reported to the World Health Organization from 145 countries and with an estimated 5 to 10 million people worldwide infected with HIV, AIDS has become firmly established as a global pandemic. In the region of the Americas over 100,862 cases of AIDS have been reported with indigenous transmission documented in 45 to 46 countries. While North America has the highest annual number of AIDS cases per population, with 72 cases/million, the Caribbean subregion has a disproportionately high number of cases, with annual rates as high as 200 to 300 cases/million population for some countries. Despite differences in absolute number of cases, there has been a remarkable similarity in the temporal rate of increase of AIDS in the countries of the Americas, reflecting delayed introduction of the virus to some areas with an early exponential increase similar to that observed initially in the United States. Although the modes of transmission of HIV are the same throughout the region, evidence of increasing bisexual and heterosexual transmission, particularly in the Caribbean subregion, has resulted in a lower male-to-female ratio of AIDS cases and increased perinatal transmission. Clinically, a resurgence of diarrheal diseases, respiratory infections, and tuberculosis has been documented in association with HIV infection in many tropical countries of the Americas. With relatively high rates of HTLV-I infection already established in the Caribbean subregion, the overall public health problems of the Americas will be markedly potentiated by further spread of these 2 human retroviruses. If HIV infection continues to penetrate the poor and less advantaged populations in Latin America and the Caribbean, the potential exists for a massive epidemic in the Americas that may rapidly parallel the situation in Africa.
145个国家已向世界卫生组织报告了超过14.3万例艾滋病病例,据估计全球有500万至1000万人感染了艾滋病毒,艾滋病已成为一场确凿无疑的全球大流行病。在美洲地区,已报告了超过100862例艾滋病病例,45至46个国家有本土传播的记录。虽然北美按人口计算的艾滋病病例年数最多,为每百万人口72例,但加勒比次区域的病例数却高得不成比例,一些国家的年发病率高达每百万人口200至300例。尽管病例绝对数存在差异,但美洲各国艾滋病病例的时间增长速度却有着显著的相似性,这反映出病毒在一些地区引入较晚,随后出现了类似于美国最初观察到的早期指数增长。虽然整个区域艾滋病毒的传播方式相同,但双性恋和异性传播增加的证据,特别是在加勒比次区域,导致艾滋病病例的男女比例降低,围产期传播增加。临床上,在美洲许多热带国家,腹泻病、呼吸道感染和结核病的复发与艾滋病毒感染有关。由于加勒比次区域已经有较高的HTLV-I感染率,这两种人类逆转录病毒的进一步传播将显著加剧美洲的整体公共卫生问题。如果艾滋病毒感染继续在拉丁美洲和加勒比的贫困和弱势群体中蔓延,美洲就有可能出现大规模疫情,迅速与非洲的情况相当。