Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0019693 (HIV)
170,526 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Clinically relevant movement disorders are identified in 3% of patients with HIV infection seen at tertiary referral centres. In the same setting, prospective follow-up shows that 50% of patients with AIDS develop tremor, parkinsonism or other extrapyramidal features. Hemiballism-hemichorea and tremor are the most common hyperkinesias seen in patients who are HIV positive, but other movement disorders diagnosed in these patients include dystonia, chorea, myoclonus, tics, paroxysmal dyskinesias and parkinsonism. Patients with movement disorders usually present with other clinical features such as peripheral neuropathy, seizures, myelopathy and dementia. In the vast majority of patients, hyperkinesias result from lesions caused by opportunistic infections, particularly toxoplasmosis, which damage the basal ganglia connections. On the other hand, parkinsonism and tremor can result from dopaminergic dysfunction resulting from HIV itself or the use of antidopaminergic drugs. The management of patients who are HIV positive who present with movement disorders involves recognition and treatment of opportunistic infections, symptomatic treatment of the movement disorder and the use of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART). The most effective treatment of cerebral toxoplasmosis in patients with HIV infection is the combination of sulfadiazine and pyrimethamine. Symptomatic treatment of the movement disorder is often disappointing: hemiballism improves with antipsychotics, but tremor, parkinsonism and other phenomena usually fail to respond to available therapies. Preliminary data suggest that HAART may be helpful in the symptomatic control as well as prevention of movement disorders in patients who are HIV positive.
...
PMID:HIV-related movement disorders: epidemiology, pathogenesis and management. 1226 60

Hemiballism is a rare movement disorder that presents with unilateral flinging movements of the limbs. In traditional teaching, it has been characterised as almost pathognomonic of a lesion in the subthalamic nucleus (STN). The prognosis was described as grave, with severe disability and death in many cases. However, review of more recent reports shows that the STN is directly involved in only a minority of cases. The prognosis is benign in most cases, with almost all patients responding well to treatment and many having spontaneous remission, although long-term prognosis of cerebrovascular disease may not be so good. There have also been recent insights into the pathophysiology of hemiballism, which have emphasised the importance of altered firing patterns in basal-ganglia structures. Recent studies have pointed to previously unrecognised causes, particularly non-ketotic hyperosmolar hyperglycaemia and complications of HIV infection, that may account for a substantial proportion of cases of hemiballism.
...
PMID:Hemiballism: revisiting a classic disorder. 1457 34