Howlett William P
Department of Internal Medicine, Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre, Moshi, Tanzania.
Center for International Health, University of Bergen, Norway.
Afr Health Sci. 2019 Jun;19(2):1953-1977. doi: 10.4314/ahs.v19i2.19.
Neurological disorders in HIV infection are a common cause of morbidity and mortality. The aim of this paper is to provide a narrative overview of up to date information concerning neurological disorders affecting HIV infected persons in Africa.
Seminal research concerning neurological disorders among HIV-infected adults in sub-Saharan Africa from prior to 2000 was combined with an in-depth search of PubMed to identify literature published from 2000 to 2017. The following Mesh terms were used. "Nervous System Diseases" "HIV Infections" and "Africa South of the Sahara" and "Seizures" or "Spinal Cord Diseases" or "Peripheral Nervous System Diseases" or "AIDS Dementia Complex" or "Opportunistic Infections" or "Immune Reconstitution Inflammatory Syndrome" or "Stroke". Only those articles written in English were used. A total of 352 articles were identified, selected and reviewed and 180 were included in the study. These included case series, observational studies, interventional studies, guidelines and reviews with metanalyses. The author also included 15 publications on the subject covering the earlier phase of the HIV epidemic in Africa from 1987 to 1999 making a total of 195 references in the study. This was combined with extensive personal experience diagnosing and treating these neurological disorders.
Neurological disorders were common, typically occurring in WHO stages III/IV. These were in three main categories: those arising from opportunistic processes mostly infections, direct HIV infection and autoimmunity. The most common were those arising from direct HIV infection occurring in >50%. These included HIV-associated neurocognitive dysfunction (HAND), neuropathy and myelopathy. Opportunistic infections occurred in >20% and frequently had a 6-9-month mortality rate of 60-70%. The main causes were cryptococcus, tuberculosis, toxoplasmosis and acute bacterial meningitis. Concurrent systemic tuberculosis occurred in almost 50%.
Neurological disorders are common in HIV in Africa and the main CNS opportunistic infections result in high mortality rates. Strategies aimed at reducing their high burden, morbidity and mortality include early HIV diagnosis and anti-retroviral therapy (ART), screening and chemoprophylaxis of main opportunistic infections, improved clinical diagnosis and management and programme strengthening.
HIV感染中的神经系统疾病是发病和死亡的常见原因。本文旨在对有关影响非洲HIV感染者的神经系统疾病的最新信息进行叙述性综述。
将2000年以前撒哈拉以南非洲地区HIV感染成人神经系统疾病的开创性研究与对PubMed的深入检索相结合,以识别2000年至2017年发表的文献。使用了以下医学主题词:“神经系统疾病”“HIV感染”“撒哈拉以南非洲”以及“癫痫发作”或“脊髓疾病”或“周围神经系统疾病”或“艾滋病痴呆综合征”或“机会性感染”或“免疫重建炎症综合征”或“中风”。仅使用英文撰写的文章。共识别、筛选和审阅了352篇文章,其中180篇纳入研究。这些文章包括病例系列、观察性研究、干预性研究、指南以及有荟萃分析的综述。作者还纳入了15篇关于该主题的出版物,涵盖了1987年至1999年非洲HIV流行的早期阶段,研究中总计有195篇参考文献。这与诊断和治疗这些神经系统疾病的丰富个人经验相结合。
神经系统疾病很常见,通常发生在世卫组织III/IV期。主要分为三大类:由机会性过程引起的,主要是感染、HIV直接感染和自身免疫。最常见的是由HIV直接感染引起的,发生率超过50%。这些包括HIV相关神经认知功能障碍(HAND)、神经病变和脊髓病。机会性感染发生率超过20%,6至9个月的死亡率通常为60%至70%。主要病因是隐球菌、结核病、弓形虫病和急性细菌性脑膜炎。几乎50%的患者并发系统性结核病。
神经系统疾病在非洲的HIV感染者中很常见,主要的中枢神经系统机会性感染导致高死亡率。旨在减轻其高负担、发病率和死亡率的策略包括早期HIV诊断和抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)、主要机会性感染的筛查和化学预防、改善临床诊断和管理以及加强项目建设。