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The mode of heterosexual transmission of human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) is not yet understood. The semen of HIV-infected men contains free virus and infected cells, and it is not known which of these is more important for sexual transmission of the virus to women. Some investigators have presented in vitro studies supporting a cellular mode of transmission of HIV and have suggested that infected lymphoid cells may act as the primary source of infection. This has become known as the "Trojan Horse" hypothesis. In vivo demonstrations of such events are lacking and are not likely to be forthcoming using human subjects. To investigate the ability of normal lymphoid cells to invade the cervicovaginal mucosa in an experimental animal, we stained C3H/He (H-2Kk) mouse peritoneal lymphoid cells with bisbenzimide, a vital fluorescent DNA-binding dye, and inoculated the cells atraumatically into the vaginas of progestin-treated, BALB/c (H-2Kd) recipient mice. Donor cells were identified in recipient tissues by their bisbenzimide-fluorescent nuclei and by fluorescein staining of the membrane antigen, H-2Kk. Donor lymphoid cells were observed in histological sections of recipient cervicovaginal mucosa and also in the iliac lymph nodes of 34 of 36 recipient mice 24 h after inoculation into the vagina. The number of donor cells in the iliac lymph nodes was 8.6 +/- 1.4 (mean +/-
SEM
) cells per mouse with a range of 0-35 cells per mouse. Approximately 28% of the donor lymphoid cells in recipient lymph nodes expressed CD4, which in humans is the receptor for HIV. We did not detect F4/80, a marker of mature mouse macrophages in the donor cell population, on any of the migrating cells in recipient lymph nodes. However, this negative result is equivocal, because the marker might be down-regulated after transfer or the migrating macrophages might be difficult to dissociate from the recipient lymph node tissue. These observations in mice support the suggestion that HIV-containing lymphoid cells in the semen of infected men may invade the cervicovaginal mucosa after sexual intercourse and deliver the virus to a woman's internal environment. However, both the donor cells and the recipient reproductive tract of the mice in the present study differed in significant respects from their counterparts in humans that might be involved in heterosexual HIV transmission. Further studies are needed to determine whether this possible mode of virus transmission is mainly responsible for heterosexual transmission of HIV in humans.
...
PMID:Migration of foreign lymphocytes from the mouse vagina into the cervicovaginal mucosa and to the iliac lymph nodes. 911 58
Although skeletal muscle abnormalities have been described in association with human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV), the effects of HIV infection on respiratory muscle function have not been well characterized. We hypothesized that HIV+ individuals may develop respiratory muscle weakness and that respiratory muscle dysfunction may contribute to the unexplained dyspnea that occurs in the setting of HIV. To test this hypothesis we studied maximal inspiratory pressure (MIP), maximal expiratory pressure (MEP), inspiratory muscle endurance, and respiratory symptoms in 23 HIV+ male outpatients who had no history of acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS)-related pulmonary complications, with a CD4+ T-lymphocyte count of 331.6 +/- 62.1 (mean +/-
SEM
). Respiratory muscle endurance was measured with an incremental threshold loading (ITL) protocol. We compared these results to those for 14 HIV- males matched for age and weight. Compared with the controls, HIV+ subjects had a significantly lower mean MIP (98.7 +/- 7.4 versus 121.4 +/- 9.3 cm H2O, p < 0.05) and MEP (115.0 +/- 9.3 versus 152.1 +/- 14.8 cm H2O, p < 0.05). Furthermore, during ITL, the mean load at task failure in the HIV+ group was 295.7 +/- 36.2 g, versus 405.8 +/- 52.2 g in the control group (p < 0.05). In the HIV+ subjects there was no relationship between muscle performance and CD4+ count or azidothymidine (AZT) use. There was, however, a highly significant relationship between respiratory muscle dysfunction and symptoms of dyspnea. We conclude that HIV seropositivity is associated with a decline in respiratory muscle performance. This impairment in respiratory muscle function may contribute to the feeling of breathlessness that has been well described in this patient population.
...
PMID:Respiratory muscle dysfunction associated with human immunodeficiency virus infection. 911 90
Although human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) disease is increasing rapidly among women, no prior studies have investigated gender-based therapeutic strategies for the treatment of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and its complications in this population. Markedly decreased serum androgen levels have been demonstrated in women with AIDS and may be a contributing factor to the wasting syndrome in this population. To assess the effects of androgen replacement therapy in women with AIDS wasting, we conducted a randomized, placebo-controlled, pilot study of transdermal testosterone administration. The primary aim of the study was to determine efficacy in terms of the change in serum testosterone levels, safety parameters and tolerability. A secondary aim of the study was to investigate testosterone effects on weight, body composition, quality of life, and functional indexes. Fifty-three ambulatory women with the AIDS wasting syndrome defined as weight less than 90% of ideal body weight or weight loss of more than 10% of the preillness maximum, free of new opportunistic infection within 6 weeks of study initiation, and with screening serum levels of free testosterone less than the mean of the normal reference range (< 3 pg/mL) were enrolled in the study. Subjects were age 37 +/- 1 yr old (mean +/-
SEM
), weighed 92 +/- 2% of ideal body weight, and had lost 17 +/- 1% of their maximum weight. CD4 count was 324 +/- 36 cells/mm3, and viral burden was 102,382 +/- 28,580 copies. Subjects were randomized into three treatment groups, in which two placebo patches (PP), one active/one placebo patch (AP group), or two active patches (AA group) were applied twice weekly to the abdomen for 12 weeks. The expected nominal delivery rates of testosterone were 150 and 300 microg/day, respectively, for the AP and AA groups. Forty-five subjects completed the study (PP group, n = 13; AP group, n = 14; AA group, n = 18). Two additional subjects from the PP group and two from the AP group were included in the intent to treat analysis. Serum free testosterone levels increased significantly from 1.2 +/- 0.2 to 5.9 +/- 0.8 pg/mL (AP) and from 1.9 +/- 0.4 to 12.4 +/- 1.6 pg/mL (AA) in response to testosterone administration (P < 0.0001 for comparison of AA vs. PP and AP vs. PP; normal range, 1.3-6.8 pg/mL). Testosterone administration was generally well tolerated locally and systemically, with no adverse trends in hirsutism scores, lipid profiles, or liver function tests. Weight increased significantly in the AP group (1.9 +/- 0.7 kg) vs. the PP group (0.6 +/- 0.8 kg; P = 0.043), but did not increase significantly in the AA group (0.9 +/- 0.4 kg; P = 0.263 vs. PP, by mixed effects model assessing the interaction of time and treatment on all available data, one-tailed test). Improved social functioning (P = 0.024, by one-tailed test) and a trend toward improved pain score (P = 0.059) were observed in the AP vs. the PP-treated patients (RAND 36-Item Health Survey questionnaire). Five of six previously amenorrheic patients in the AP group had spontaneous resumption of menses compared to only one of four amenorrheic patients in the AA group (P = 0.045 for comparison of actual number of periods during the study). This study is the first investigation of testosterone administration in women with AIDS wasting. We demonstrate a novel method to augment testosterone levels in such patients that is safe and well tolerated during short term administration. At the lower of the two doses administered in this study, testosterone therapy was associated with positive trends in weight gain and quality of life. Higher, more supraphysiological, dosing was not associated with positive trends in weight or overall well-being. These data suggest that testosterone administration may improve the status of women with AIDS wasting. Further studies are needed to assess the effects of testosterone on weight in HIV-infected women and to define the optimal therapeutic window for test
...
PMID:Transdermal testosterone administration in women with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome wasting: a pilot study. 970 37
The prognostic importance of specific and general tests of immune function were examined among a cohort of 170 subjects infected with human
immunodeficiency
virus type-1 (HIV), living in an area endemic for the fungal infection coccidioidomycosis. Using the proportional hazards model and multivariate analysis, lack of expression of coccidioidal delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) was found to be dependent on anergy in response to the non-coccidioidal antigens mumps, Trichophyton and Candida (relative hazard 4.2, 95% CI 1.8-9.8, P=0.001). Among subjects with CD4 lymphocyte counts >/=250 microl-1 on entry into the study, the in vitro lymphocyte transformation (LT) response to the coccidioidal antigen toluene spherule lysate was 4967+/-1652 (mean counts per minute (c.p.m.)+/-
SEM
) in subjects with coccidioidal DTH compared with 136+/-222 in those with negative DTH (P<0.001). However, amongst those whose CD4 count was <250 microl-1, LT responses were low and there was no significant difference based on coccidioidal DTH (P=0.965). Using the proportional hazards model and multivariate analysis, only a CD4 count <250 microl-1 was prognostically associated with the development of either active coccidioidomycosis or AIDS. These data indicate that
immunodeficiency
, particularly a CD4 lymphocyte count <250 microl-1, is the most important factor in the lack of expression of specific immunity to coccidioidomycosis and in the development of active coccidioidomycosis among HIV-infected individuals living in the coccidioidal endemic area.
...
PMID:Delayed-type hypersensitivity, in vitro T-cell responsiveness and risk of active coccidioidomycosis among HIV-infected patients living in the coccidioidal endemic area. 1042 59
Hypogonadism is prevalent among human
immunodeficiency
virus-infected men, in whom significantly reduced quality of life and mood disturbances have been reported. Previous studies have not investigated the relationship between depression score and gonadal function among such patients. We first compared depression scores in hypogonadal (n = 52) and eugonadal (n = 10) patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) wasting, matched for weight and disease status, and then investigated the effects of testosterone administration on depression score in a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study among the group of hypogonadal men with AIDS wasting. The primary end point in all comparisons was the Beck Depression Inventory. Hypogonadal patients demonstrated significantly increased scores on the Beck inventory compared with eugonadal-, age-, weight-, and disease status-matched subjects (15.5+/-1.1 vs. 10.6+/-1.4 mean +/-
SEM
, P = 0.02). Among the combined hypogonadal and eugonadal subjects, a significant inverse correlation was seen between the Beck score and both free (r = 0.41, P<0.01) and total serum testosterone levels (r = -0.43, P<0.001). The relationship between the Beck score and testosterone levels remained highly significant, controlling for weight, viral load, CD4 count, and antidepressant use (P<0.01 for free testosterone, P<0.001 for total testosterone). Furthermore, when subjects were divided into two groups, based on a Beck score greater than 18 or less than or equal to 18, serum total and free testosterone levels were significantly lower in the subjects with a Beck score greater than 18, whereas there were no differences in weight, viral load, CD4 count, or Karnofsky status. End of study data were available in 39 patients who completed the randomized, placebo-controlled study. Beck score decreased significantly only in the subjects receiving testosterone (-5.8+/-1.3, P< 0.001), but not in subjects randomized to placebo (-2.7+/-1.3, P> 0.05). In a regression analysis, the change in Beck score was related significantly to change in weight (P<0.01). These data demonstrate increased depression score in association with hypogonadism in men with AIDS wasting, independent of weight, virologic status, and other disease factors. In such patients, administration of testosterone results in a significant improvement in depression inventory score. This effect may be a direct effect of testosterone or related to positive effects of testosterone on weight and/or other anthropometric indices. Additional studies are needed to assess the effects of testosterone on clinical depression indices in human
immunodeficiency
virus-infected patients.
...
PMID:Effects of hypogonadism and testosterone administration on depression indices in HIV-infected men. 1063 64
Drug interactions between rifamycins and highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) have raised concerns in the treatment of human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV)-infected patients with tuberculosis. We conducted a study of this interaction by measuring serum drug levels of all HIV-infected patients with tuberculosis who were admitted to A. G. Holley State Tuberculosis Hospital (Florida) from October 1997 through December 1998, who were concomitantly treated with rifabutin and HAART. All 25 patients studied became culture-negative within 2 months of initiation of therapy for tuberculosis and remained negative for a median of 13 months follow-up after completion of therapy. HIV viral loads (mean+/-
SEM
) decreased significantly from 4.95+/-0.21 log10 copies/mL before initiation of HAART to 2.77+/-0.07 log10 copies/mL before discharge (P<.001); 20 of 25 patients achieved viral loads of <500copies/mL. In summary, the concomitant use of rifabutin and HAART can lead to successful treatment of HIV-infected patients with tuberculosis without increased side effects.
...
PMID:Use of rifabutin with protease inhibitors for human immunodeficiency virus-infected patients with tuberculosis. 1117 Sep 31
The clinical consequences of androgen deficiency in human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV)-infected women remain underappreciated. The pharmacokinetics of transdermally administered testosterone in premenopausal women and HIV-infected women have not been studied. In this study we compared the pharmacokinetics of a novel testosterone matrix transdermal system (TMTDS) in healthy premenopausal women and women infected with HIV. Eight menstruating HIV-infected women, 18-50 yr of age, who had been receiving stable antiretroviral therapy, including a protease inhibitor, for at least 12 weeks and nine healthy, menstruating women of comparable age were enrolled. After baseline sampling during a 24-h control period in the early follicular phase (days 1-6), two TMTDS patches were applied with an expected delivery rate of 300 microg testosterone daily over an application period of 3-4 days. After 72 h, the patches were removed, a second set of two patches was applied, and blood samples were drawn over 96 h. Baseline serum total and free testosterone levels were lower in HIV-infected women than in healthy women. A diurnal rhythm of testosterone secretion, with higher levels in the morning and lower levels in the late afternoon, was apparent in both groups of women. Free testosterone levels were in the midnormal range at baseline in healthy women and increased above the upper limit of normal during TMTDS application. In HIV-infected women, free testosterone levels were in the low normal range at baseline and rose into the upper normal range during patch application. Serum total testosterone levels increased into the midnormal range in HIV-infected women and into the upper normal range in healthy women during patch application. The mean increments in free and total testosterone levels were significantly lower in HIV-infected women than in healthy women. Testosterone bioavailability, expressed as the mean +/-
SEM
baseline-subtracted area under the total testosterone curve, was significantly greater in healthy women than in HIV-infected women [3323 +/- 566 ng/dL x h (115 +/- 20 nmol/L x h) vs. 1506 +/- 316 ng/dL x h (52 +/- 11 nmol/ L x h); P = 0.016]. Assuming a daily testosterone delivery rate of 300 microg/day, the apparent plasma clearance was significantly higher in HIV-infected women than in healthy women (2531 +/- 469 vs. 1127 +/- 217 L/day1 P = 0.022), respectively. There was no significant change from baseline in serum LH, sex hormone-binding globulin, and estradiol levels in either group. Serum FSH levels showed a greater decrease from baseline in healthy women. A regimen of two testosterone patches applied twice a week can maintain serum total and free testosterone levels in the mid- to upper normal range, respectively, in HIV-infected women with low testosterone levels. During TMTDS application, the increments in serum total and free testosterone levels are lower in HIV-infected women than in healthy women, presumably due to increased plasma clearance or decreased absorption. Further studies are needed to assess the effects of physiological androgen replacement in HIV-infected women.
...
PMID:Pharmacokinetics of a novel testosterone matrix transdermal system in healthy, premenopausal women and women infected with the human immunodeficiency virus. 1090 84
The immunosuppressant drug cyclosporin A (CsA) is known to cause reduction in number, DNA synthesis and function of Langerhans cells (LC). Since also the differentiation of LC is known to be hampered in conditions of acquired
immunodeficiency
not due to drugs, we investigated whether this occurs with CsA. Rats were injected subcutaneously with CsA (5, 10 and 50 mgxkg(-1) x d(-1)) for three weeks; the skin was analyzed by Ia immunohistochemistry and by electron microscopy. Epidermal immunolabeled cells were 15+/-3.5 (mean +/-
SEM
) per 100 basal keratinocytes in untreated controls and 8.75+/-1.3, 4.75+/-1.0 and 1.7+/-1.2 upon increasing doses of CsA (p<0.01). By electron microscopy, monocytoid cells with deep invaginations of the plasma membrane and roundish LC poor in Birbeck granules appeared in the epidermis upon treatment. The results suggest that CsA inhibits the differentiation of LC precursors in the epidermis and that this can in part explain the selective increase in the risk of skin viral disease and cancer in chronically treated patients.
...
PMID:Inhibited differentiation of Langerhans cells in the rat epidermis upon systemic treatment with cyclosporin A. 1119 84
The introduction of highly active antiretroviral therapy with protease inhibitors in 1996 has changed the morbidity and mortality of acquired immune deficiency syndrome patients. Therefore, the aetiologies and prognostic factors of human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV)-infected patients with life-threatening respiratory failure requiring intensive care unit (ICU) admission need to be reassessed. From 1993 to 1998, we prospectively evaluated 57 HIV patients (mean+/-
SEM
age 36.5+/-1.3 yrs) admitted to the ICU showing pulmonary infiltrates and acute respiratory failure. A total of 21 and 30 patients were diagnosed as having Pneumocystis carinii and bacterial pneumonia, respectively, of whom 13 and eight died during their ICU stay (p=0.01). Both groups of patients had similar age, Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE) II score, and severity in respiratory failure. The number of cases with bacterial pneumonia admitted to ICU decreased after 1996 (p=0.05). Logistic regression analysis showed that (APACHE) II score >17, serum albumin level <25 g.(-1), and diagnosis of P. carinii pneumonia were the only factors at entry associated with ICU mortality (p=0.02). Patients with bacterial pneumonia are less frequently admitted to the intensive care unit after the introduction of highly active antiretroviral therapy with protease inhibitors in 1996. Compared to the previous series, it was observed that the few Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia patients that need intensive care still have a bad prognosis.
...
PMID:Reappraisal of the aetiology and prognostic factors of severe acute respiratory failure in HIV patients. 1130 62
We assessed the relationship between dietary intake, body composition, and metabolic parameters in 85 consecutive human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV)-infected patients with fat redistribution. Dietary history and values for fasting glucose, insulin, lipids, and oral glucose tolerance were obtained for 62 men and 23 women with HIV infection and fat redistribution (mean age +/- standard error of the mean [
SEM
], 43.5+/-0.9 years; mean body mass index [BMI] +/-
SEM
, 26.3+/-0.5 kg/m2). A multivariate regression analysis was used to predict insulin area under the curve (AUC) following the oral glucose tolerance test; this included age, sex, BMI, waist-to-hip ratio, kilocalories, duration of protease inhibitor (PI) use, fat redistribution pattern, alcohol intake, dietary fiber intake, and polyunsaturated-to-saturated (P:S) fat ratio. Only age (P=.004), PI use duration (P=.02), and P:S fat ratio (P=.003) were positively associated with insulin AUC. Dietary fiber intake was inversely associated with the insulin AUC (P=.001). In a similar analysis, alcohol consumption was a significant positive predictor of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol. Polyunsaturated fats, fiber, and alcohol are strongly associated with insulin resistance and hyperlipidemia in this population and may be important targets for dietary modification.
...
PMID:Modifiable dietary habits and their relation to metabolic abnormalities in men and women with human immunodeficiency virus infection and fat redistribution. 1148 94
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