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Query: UMLS:C0019693 (
HIV
)
170,526
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Antiretroviral therapy has changed the face of the treatment of
HIV
throughout the world, converting a fatal into a
chronic disease
.
HIV
has reached disastrous levels of infection in southern Africa, and increased use of life-saving therapy is being implemented. The antiretrovirals have a variety of metabolic side effects that have been implicated in cardiovascular disease in other populations. This article discusses the impact of
HIV
on southern Africa, the metabolic and cardiac complications of both
HIV
and antiretrovirals, and strategies for dealing with drug side effects.
...
PMID:The cardiovascular consequences of HIV and antiretroviral therapy. 1461 Jun 9
The Functional Assessment of
Chronic Illness
Therapy (FACIT) Measurement System is a collection of health-related quality of life (HRQOL) questionnaires targeted to the management of chronic illness. The measurement system, under development since 1987, began with the creation of a generic CORE questionnaire called the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-General (FACT-G). The FACT-G (now in Version 4) is a 27-item compilation of general questions divided into four primary QOL domains: Physical Well-Being, Social/Family Well-Being, Emotional Well-Being, and Functional Well-Being. It is appropriate for use with patients with any form of cancer, and extensions of it have been used and validated in other chronic illness condition (e.g.,
HIV
/AIDS; multiple sclerosis; Parkinson's disease; rheumatoid arthritis), and in the general population. The FACIT Measurement System now includes over 400 questions, some of which have been translated into more than 45 languages. Assessment of any one patient is tailored so that the most-relevant questions are asked and administration time for any one assessment is usually less than 15 minutes. This is accomplished both by the use of specific subscales for relevant domains of HRQOL, or computerized adaptive testing (CAT) of selected symptoms and functional areas. FACIT questionnaires can be administered by self-report (paper or computer) or interview (face-to-face or telephone). Available scoring, normative data and information on meaningful change now allow one to interpret results in the context of a growing literature base.
...
PMID:The Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy (FACIT) Measurement System: properties, applications, and interpretation. 1467 68
Forty-five active substance abusers with
HIV
/AIDS voluntarily participated in a substance abuse treatment research study with interviews at intake, 6 months and 12 months. These participants were engaged in treatment for a minimum of 45 days and a maximum of 90 days. The study used a nursing model of care, The Personalized Nursing LIGHT model, to integrate treatment for
HIV
/AIDS with substance abuse treatment. The LIGHT model seeks to enhance patient well being directly and thereby to support interventions that decrease substance use and improve management of
chronic disease
. The substance abuse treatment team included a nurse who used the LIGHT model and coordinated an integrated care protocol. The nurse accompanied clients on visits to their physicians for
HIV
treatment and facilitated the integration of medical recommendations with the substance abuse treatment. Six-month posttest data were gathered on all 45 participants and 12-month posttest interviews were accomplished with 29 of them. At 6 months, 78% of the respondents (35/45) reported no drug use in the past 30 days, and, at 12 months, 79% (23/29) were drug free for the past month. Significant decreases from intake to 6 months were detected on Addiction Severity Index (ASI) composite scores for drug use (p < 0.01), alcohol use (p < 0.04), medical severity (p < 0.02), psychiatric severity (p < 0.01), legal problems (p < 0.04), and employment difficulty (p < 0.01). Improvement of 6-month drug use composite scores was related significantly to treatment duration (R = 0.42; p < 0.01). Significant decreases in ASI measures of drug use (p < 0.01), alcohol use (p < 0.01), employment difficulty (p < 0.01), and family/social problems (p < 0.01) also occurred at 12 months. Well being, as measured by a Global Well Being Index, was found to improve significantly at 6 months (p < 0.02) and 12 months (p < 0.07). Concurrently, significant improvement was observed on Medical Outcomes Study-36-Item Short-Form Health Survey (SF-36) measures of general health and health functioning. These changes were noted at 6 months in the general health (p < 0.02), mental health (p < 0.01), social functioning (p < 0.01), role/emotional status (p < 0.04), and vitality (p < 0.01) subscales. At 12 months, the social functioning (p < 0.01) subscale responses were further decreased.
...
PMID:Integrating medical and substance abuse treatment for addicts living with HIV/AIDS: evidence-based nursing practice model. 1471 43
Nowadays, the
human immunodeficiency virus infection
(
HIV
) is a
chronic disease
. In the frequent clinical situations with fever, lymph nodes and loss weight it is necessary to determine their etiology, for establishing a specific treatment. Gastrointestinal opportunistic infections or gastric lymphomatous or sarcomatous process, which can accumulate Ga67, may be present in the patient with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. We report 2 cases with gastric uptake in which endoscopy and biopsy was obtained. In the first one, with previous treatment with omeprazol and almalgate for gastroesophagic reflux, endoscopy and biopsy were normal and in the second patient an Helicobacter pylori infection was diagnosed. We think that gastric uptake of Ga67 in
HIV
patients, must indicate to the clinician to rule out associated pathologies.
...
PMID:[Gastric uptake of gallium67 in the human immunodeficiency virus infection]. 1497 95
As more effective
HIV
therapies have become available, resource constraints and cost-effectiveness have increasingly been at the centre of the debate on
HIV
care. Economic analysis is an important methodological approach to the understanding and establishment of priorities for health interventions designed to combat
HIV
in both high-income and low-income countries. In this paper, I briefly discuss different types of clinical economic analysis, and then consider the cost, affordability and cost-effectiveness of combination antiretroviral therapy in
HIV
patients in high-income and low-income countries. In high-income countries,
HIV disease
has become an expensive treatable
chronic disease
, with annual expenditures per patient of about US$ 20 000. Cost-effectiveness analyses show that antiretroviral therapeutic regimens offer good value for the resources spent compared to many other accepted health care interventions. In low-income countries, major programmes of combination antiretroviral therapy distribution are being planned and becoming operational as drug prices plummet and resources increase. More refined cost-effectiveness analyses are needed to evaluate available
HIV
/AIDS prevention, treatment, and care, and to identify the interventions that provide the best value for money.
...
PMID:Costs associated with combination antiretroviral therapy in HIV-infected patients. 1498 77
Since 1998, French
HIV
guidelines have recommended use of
HIV
prophylaxis after unprotected sex (postexposure prophylaxis, or PEP) with an
HIV
-positive partner. To characterize factors associated with lack of PEP knowledge in an
HIV
-positive population, a cross-sectional survey was conducted of 737 French
HIV
-positive outpatients followed in AIDS care units of 2 regions accounting for 60% of French AIDS cases. Information was collected through face-to-face interviews. The sample was weighted to improve national validity. Median age was 41 years, 73.2% of patients were male, and 8.5% reported
HIV
-related risk behaviors. Those who knew about PEP and those who did not were compared with chi2 tests and logistic regression. One third of the sample had never heard of PEP. In multivariate analysis, lack of PEP knowledge was associated with older age, low educational level, unstable housing, unawareness of current
HIV
laboratory data, and lack of ability to confide in nurse and to seek out information from various sources. The increased number of people living with
HIV infection
as a
chronic disease
raises new challenges for its secondary prevention. Preventive programs aimed at
HIV
-positive individuals and their sexual partners are strongly needed.
...
PMID:Knowledge of HIV postexposure prophylaxis in a population of HIV-positive outpatients: results of a French national survey. 1509 56
The use of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) has served to significantly reduce the mortality of
HIV
-infected persons. However, this treatment is associated with a host of adverse effects: fatigue, nausea, pain, anxiety and depression. Rather than utilise traditional pharmacological treatments for these effects, many
HIV
/AIDS patients are utilising adjunct therapies to maintain their quality of life while they undergo treatment. Exercise has consistently been listed as one of the most popular self-care therapies and a small number of studies have been conducted to examine the impact of exercise on the most common self-reported symptoms of
HIV
and AIDS and the adverse effects of treatment. Although the results are generally positive, there are clear limitations to this work. The existing studies have utilised small samples and experienced high rates of attrition. In addition, the majority of the studies were conducted prior to the widespread use of HAART, which limits the ability to generalise these data. As a result, data from other
chronic disease
and healthy samples are used to suggest that exercise has the potential to be a beneficial treatment across the range of symptoms and adverse effects experienced by
HIV
-infected individuals. However, additional research is required with this population to demonstrate these effects.
...
PMID:The benefits of exercise training for quality of life in HIV/AIDS in the post-HAART era. 1524 86
The advent of highly active antiretroviral therapy has facilitated the virtual elimination of mother-to-child transmission of
HIV infection
in developed countries, reducing transmission rates to approximately 1 to 2%. In these settings, highly active antiretroviral therapy has also transformed pediatric
HIV infection
into a
chronic disease
; although there are associated costs in terms of side effects and the heavy pill burden. In less developed settings, easier-to-use adaptations of antiretroviral therapy regimens, such as short-course and single-dose antiretroviral strategies or neonatal postexposure prophylaxis can also substantially prevent mother-to-child transmission, although to a lesser degree than highly active antiretroviral therapy. However, postnatal transmission of infection through breastfeeding significantly reduces the longer-term efficacy of these strategies. Ongoing research is focusing on the use of antiretroviral therapy in the breastfeeding period.
...
PMID:Antiretroviral therapy and mother-to-child transmission of HIV-1. 1548 35
An acute hepatitis C infection was diagnosed in three
HIV
-positive gay men, aged 43, 48 and 30 years, respectively. In all three, unprotected sexual intercourse and fisting was a universal risk factor for the infection. They all denied having used drugs intravenously, which is the most common risk factor. The third man had a documented proctitis (lymphogranuloma venereum) at the time when the HCV transmission must have taken place. No serious complications occurred during the acute HCV infection. Because the infection did not resolve spontaneously after a few months, all three men were treated with pegylated interferon and ribavirin. Recently, the number of cases of acute HCV infection has been seen to increase in The Netherlands. This may be due primarily to an increase in unprotected sexual intercourse and fisting. This hypothesis is supported by a documented increased prevalence of sexually transmissible diseases among gay men in The Netherlands. As acute infections may turn into chronic infections, treatment of an acute infection should be considered in order to prevent the
chronic disease
.
...
PMID:[Sexual transmission of hepatitis C in homosexual men]. 1558 46
A double scenario characterizes the epidemiology of
HIV infection
in children. In countries where highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) is available, the pattern of
HIV infection
is evolving into that of a
chronic disease
, for which control strictly depends on patients' adherence to treatment. In developing countries with no or limited access to HAART, AIDS is rapidly expanding and is loaded with a high fatality ratio, due to the combined effects of malnutrition and opportunistic infections. The digestive tract is a target of the disease in both settings. Opportunistic infections play a major role in children with severe immune impairment, with Cryptosporidium parvum being the leading agent of severe diarrhea. Several therapeutic approaches are effective in reducing fecal output, but the eradication of the parasite is rarely obtained. Other opportunistic infections may induce severe and protracted diarrhea, including atypical mycobacteria and cytomegalovirus. Diagnosis of diarrhea should be individually tailored based on presenting symptoms and risk factors. A stepwise approach is effective in limiting patient discomfort and minimizing the costs of investigations, starting with microbiologic investigation and proceeding with endoscopy and histology. Aggressive treatment of infectious diarrhea is required in severely immunocompromised children. However, antiretroviral therapy prevents the development of severe cryptosporidiosis. The liver and pancreas are also target organs in
HIV infection
, although functional failure is rare. The digestive-absorptive functions are impaired, with steatorrhea, nutrient malabsorption, and increased permeability occurring in 20-70% of children. Intestinal dysfunction contributes to growth failure and further immune derangement, leading to wasting, the terminal stage of AIDS. Nutritional management is crucial in
HIV
-infected children and is based on aggressive nutritional rehabilitation through enteral or parenteral routes and micronutrient supplementation.
HIV
may play a direct enteropathogenic role and is implicated in both diarrhea and intestinal dysfunction. This explains the efficacy of antiretroviral therapy in inducing remission of diarrhea and restoring intestinal function. Gastrointestinal side effects of antiretroviral drugs are increasingly observed; they are often mild and transient. Severe reactions are rare but require the withdrawal of drugs. In conclusion, severe enteric infections and intestinal dysfunction characterize the intestinal involvement of
HIV infection
. This is more common in, but not limited to, children who do not receive effective antiretroviral therapy. Diagnostic approaches include microbiologic and morphologic examinations and assessment of digestive processes, but immunologic and virologic data should be also carefully considered. Treatment is based upon specific anti-infectious drugs, antiretroviral therapy, and nutritional rehabilitation.
...
PMID:Management of gastrointestinal disorders in children with HIV infection. 1561 36
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