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30 Years of HIV: Looking Back, Looking Ahead
http://www.medpagetoday.com - 5/20/13
Docs Don't Test Kids for STDs, HIV
http://www.medpagetoday.com - 5/6/13
PodMed: A Medical News Roundup from Johns Hopkins (with audio)
http://www.medpagetoday.com - 5/3/13
FDA Stalls Use of 2 HIV Drugs
http://www.medpagetoday.com - 4/29/13
Road to HIV Vaccine Hits Another Speed Bump
http://www.medpagetoday.com - 4/25/13
HIV Care Groups Fear Post-ACA Future
http://www.medpagetoday.com - 4/23/13
HAART Saves Heart in Kids with HIV (CME/CE)
http://www.medpagetoday.com - 4/22/13
Combo Defeats Fungal Meningitis in HIV (CME/CE)
http://www.medpagetoday.com - 4/3/13
HIV Infection Severity Linked to Afib (CME/CE)
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The AIDS Reader Online Archive »

 

 
INFORMATION FROM AIDS.gov BLOG
$1 Billion Health Care Innovation Awards Initiative Includes Opportunities for Models to Improve Care for PLWHA
AIDS.gov Blog - 5/22/13
Last week, U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius announced a nearly $1 billion initiative that will fund grant awards and evaluation to build on the Obama administration’s work to transform the health care system by delivering better care and lowering costs for taxpayers and patients. The Health Care Innovation Awards are funded by...
Hanging out with “We the Geeks”
AIDS.gov Blog - 5/21/13
Editor’s note: At AIDS.gov, we continue to look for ways to increase the reach of existing HIV/AIDS programs through technology and innovation. The White House is leading a Google+ hangout series about that very topic. Read more from the Office of Science and Technology Policy. This live event has concluded. Watch the first “We the Geeks”...
HIV Vaccine Research Update and HVTN 505
AIDS.gov Blog - 5/21/13
May 18th was HIV Vaccine Awareness Day, and we wanted to remind you of several posts we did last week on that subject. On Friday, we featured a guest post, Moving Forward on HIV Vaccine Awareness Day, by Dr. Nelson Michael, director of the U.S. Military HIV Research Program. And then we posted this video...
FDA to Convene Meeting on HIV Patient-Focused Drug Development and HIV Cure Research
AIDS.gov Blog - 5/20/13
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) wants to talk to people living with HIV (PLWH) and HIV/AIDS advocates. On June 14, under its Patient-Focused Drug Development initiative, FDA will ask PLWH to join an open public discussion about: the impact of HIV on your daily life, experience with currently available therapies to treat HIV, your...
HIV Vaccine Awareness Day Bulletin
AIDS.gov Blog - 5/17/13
The implementation of scientifically proven HIV prevention strategies is helping to reduce the number of new infections — the annual HIV infection rate globally fell by 22 percent from 2001 to 2011 — but a great deal more must be done. Significant scale-up of proven HIV prevention strategies coupled with the discovery of new HIV...
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FEATURED NEWS

cervical cancerConsidering everything else to there is to deal with when treating a HIV-positive woman, it might be all too easy to let one simple priority slide: the Pap smear. 
 

The first multicohort prospective study of HIV and cervical cancer offers sobering cause to reorient priorities. HIV-infected women have a higher incidence of precancerous cervical lesions.

The risk increases significantly as CD4 counts decrease.


HIV-infected Women Have Higher Risk of Incident Invasive Cervical Cancer
 

 
LATEST ARTICLES

The AIDS Reader. Vol. 19 No. 5

Images in HIV/AIDS


Liron Pantanowitz, MD; Bruce J. Dezube, MD—Series Editors

 

Keloid After Herpes Zoster in an HIV-Infected Person

By Jose G. Castro, MD; Luis Espinoza, MD
[AIDS Reader. 2009;19:187-188]

| May 11, 2009
Dr Castro and Dr Espinoza are assistant professors of clinical medicine in the division of infectious diseases at the Miller School of Medicine, University of Miami.

Herpes zoster, or shingles, is characterized by unilateral radicular pain and a vesicular rash that is generally limited to a single dermatome. It results from reactivation of latent varicella-zoster virus (VZV) within the sensory ganglia. The incidence and severity of herpes zoster increase with advancing age1; more than half of all persons in whom herpes zoster develops are older than 60 years. Zoster occurs with higher frequency in HIV-infected persons, and it may occur at any stage of HIV infection.2

A 65-year-old black Hispanic man whose HIV infection had been diagnosed 1 year ago but had never been treated, presented to the clinic with rash and moderate pain in the right side of his chest of several days’ duration. The rash had been preceded by discomfort. His CD4+ cell count was 343/µL, and his HIV RNA level was 23,500 copies/mL.

On examination, the patient had an erythematous, maculopapular, vesicular rash in the T8 dermatome distribution of the right side of his chest. A diagnosis of shingles was made on the basis of the typical presentation, and it was later confirmed by a culture of a sample taken from one of the blisters. He received treatment with oral acyclovir 800 mg 5 times a day for 7 days. One week later, there were no new lesions, and a keloid scar started to develop. The pain, however, continued with the same intensity.

Figure 1. Development of a keloid scar after an episode of herpes zoster in an HIV-infected person.

 Two months later, when the lesion had healed completely (Figures 1 and 2), the patient was started on an antiretroviral regimen of ritonavir(Drug information on ritonavir)-boosted atazanavir(Drug information on atazanavir) plus the tenofovir/emtricitabine fixed-dose combination. He has been seen in the clinic regularly every 3 months and has reported good adherence to treatment and no adverse effects to his medications. After 2 years, his HIV infection remains well controlled: his viral load is undetectable and his CD4 count is rising, but the pain has persisted and has been difficult to control. The management of his pain has been multidisciplinary (pain clinic, neurology service, and infectious diseases/HIV clinic) and has included analgesics and topical medications.

Figure 2. A keloid with a linear distribution along the affected dermatome in an HIV-infected person.

Typical zoster lesions are clinically recognizable, with pain and vesicles limited to an easily identifiable dermatome. The presentation is subtler when few lesions occur, sparse lesions are covered by hair, vesicles have not yet erupted, or existing lesions are grouped close to the midline so that the dermatomal pattern is less evident. Diagnostic clues include the presence of lesions, sensory symptoms that do not cross the midline, and pain or sensory signs. In HIV-infected patients, the lesions might get worse after the initiation of antiretroviral therapy because of the development of immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome.3

Systemic antiviral therapy is strongly recommended for all HIV-infected patients and some immunocompetent patients (eg, those older than 50 years or who have moderate to severe pain, moderate to severe rash, or nontruncal involvement). Acyclovir, licensed in the United States in 1982, has been the antiviral therapy of choice, but famciclovir(Drug information on famciclovir), another oral antiviral agent, is also effective.

Both the incidence and the duration of postherpetic neuralgia are directly correlated with increasing age. Postherpetic neuralgia can be severe and incapacitating.4 Several types of treatment are available, but no results of comparative trials have been published to assist in selection of therapy. Fortunately, most patients with postherpetic neuralgia have gradual improvement in symptoms with time.5 Nonnarcotic analgesics are occasionally effective, but many patients require narcotic medication for pain relief.

Other modalities of treatment include anticonvulsant agents (eg, phenytoin(Drug information on phenytoin) and carbamazepine(Drug information on carbamazepine)), tricyclic antidepressants (eg, amitriptyline(Drug information on amitriptyline) and desipramine), phenothiazines, cimetidine(Drug information on cimetidine), topical capsaicin, nerve blocks, subcutaneous local anesthetic, and electrical nerve stimulation.6 A herpes zoster vaccine was approved by the FDA in 2006 for use in persons 60 years and older, but it is contraindicated in persons with HIV/AIDS because it is a live-attenuated (high-dose) VZV.7

 

 

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References
1. Gnann JW Jr, Whitley RJ. Clinical practice. Herpes zoster. N Engl J Med. 2002;347:340-346.
2. Buchbinder SP, Katz MH, Hessol NA, et al. Herpes zoster and human immunodeficiency virus infection. J Infect Dis. 1992;166:1153-1156.
3. Feller L, Wood NH, Lemmer J. Herpes zoster infection as an immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome in HIV-seropositive subjects: a review. Oral Surg Oral Med Oral Pathol Oral Radiol Endod. 2007;104:455-460.
4. Baron R, Wasner G. Prevention and treatment of postherpetic neuralgia. Lancet. 2006;367:186-188.
5. Kost RG, Straus SE. Postherpetic neuralgia—pathogenesis, treatment, and prevention. N Engl J Med. 1996;335:32-42.
6. Tyring SK. Management of herpes zoster and postherpetic neuralgia. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2007;57(6 suppl):S136-S142.
7. Spach DH. Immunization for HIV-infected adults: indications, timing, and response. Top HIV Med. 2006;14:154-158.

 
IMAGES IN AIDS/HIV

Parotid Gland Deformities in HIV Seropositive Patients: The Best Choice for Cosmetic Control
April 9, 2012

More than half of people with HIV infection in the United States develop head and neck lesions. Common among these is enlargement of the parotid gland, which causes disfigurement and therefore distress. This review discusses the evidence for radiation treatment as the best option, as well as the dangers of choosing the wrong treatment for this benign comorbidity of HIV-positive status.

HIV-Positive Male Presents With Multiple Symptoms and Has a History of Colonic Polyps
December 19, 2011

A 20-year-old HIV positive male presents with headache, nausea, and vomiting following a seizure. History is notable for 3 surgeries to remove colonic polyps. Subsequent MRI brain scan with contrast reveals a mass in the left frontal lobe which is removed. The image above is an H&E stained section of the mass.

Severe Psoriasis in Advanced HIV Infection
February 3, 2010

A 50-year-old African American man with HIV infection had a CD4+ T-cell count of 18/μL (1%), CD8+ cell count of 1035/μL (69%), and CD4:CD8 ratio of 0.01 at the time of diagnosis. He had multiple erythematosquamous skin lesions over his forehead, face, chest, back, and extremities

Keloid After Herpes Zoster in an HIV-Infected Person
May 11, 2009

Herpes zoster, or shingles, is characterized by unilateral radicular pain and a vesicular rash that is generally limited to a single dermatome. It results from reactivation of latent varicella-zoster virus (VZV) within the sensory ganglia.

 
MEDLINE
Amprenavir inhibits the migration in human hepatocarcinoma cell and the growth of xenografts.
pubmed.gov - 2/28/13
The introduction of HAART (highly-active-antiretroviral-therapy) has resulted in extended survival of HIV positive patients. Conversely, due to the prolonged expectancy of life and the ageing of the HIV positive population, tumors are now one of the major cause of death, and among them hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) has become a growing concern in these patients. Considering the potential anti-tumoral effects of HIV protease inhibitors, we decided to evaluate the anti-tumoral activity of Amprenavir on liver carcinoma and to evaluate its potential synergistic effects in combination with standard chemoterapic drugs, such as Doxorubicin. Our results indicate that Amprenavir had direct inhibitory effects on invasion of Huh-7 hepatocarcinoma cell lines, inhibiting MMP proteolytic activation. Amprenavir was able to delay the growth of hepatocarcinoma xenografts in nude mice and had a synergistic effect with Doxorubicin. Furthermore, Amprenavir was able to promote regression of
Standard-dose vs high-dose multivitamin supplements for HIV.
pubmed.gov - 2/12/13
23403670 2013 02 13 2013 02 19 1538-3598 309 6 Feb 13 JAMA 545-6 10.1001/jama.2012.216991 Padayatty Sebastian J SJ Levine Mark M eng Comment Letter United States JAMA 7501160 0098-7484 0 Vitamins 12001-76-2 Vitamin B Complex 1406-18-4 Vitamin E 50-81
Standard-dose vs high-dose multivitamin supplements for HIV--reply.
pubmed.gov - 2/12/13
23403671 2013 02 13 2013 02 19 1538-3598 309 6 Feb 13 JAMA 546 10.1001/jama.2012.216995 Isanaka Sheila S Mugusi Ferdinand F Fawzi Wafaie W WW eng Comment Letter United States JAMA 7501160 0098-7484 0 Vitamins 12001-76-2 Vitamin B Complex 1406-18-4
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PRACTICE GUIDELINES
National Guideline Clearinghouse | Cognitive disorders and HIV/AIDS: HIV-associated dementia and delirium.
www.guidelines.gov -
National Guideline Clearinghouse | Trauma and post-traumatic stress disorder in patients with HIV/AIDS.
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National Guideline Clearinghouse | Suicidality and violence in patients with HIV/AIDS.
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National Guideline Clearinghouse | Evidence-based guideline: antiepileptic drug selection for people with HIV/AIDS. Report of the Quality Standards Subcommittee of the American Academy of Neurology and the Ad Hoc Task Force of the Commission on Therapeutic
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National Guideline Clearinghouse | Guidelines for improving entry into and retention in care and antiretroviral adherence for persons with HIV: evidence-based recommendations from an International Association of Physicians in AIDS Care panel.
www.guidelines.gov -
National Guideline Clearinghouse | Depression and mania in patients with HIV/AIDS.
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National Guideline Clearinghouse | HIV/AIDS evidence-based nutrition practice guideline.
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National Guideline Clearinghouse | Adapting your practice: treatment and recommendations for homeless patients with HIV/AIDS.
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National Guideline Clearinghouse | Diagnosis of pediatric HIV infection in HIV-exposed infants.
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