Antiretroviral treatment of HIV-1 in the central nervous system  

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The report concludes that antiretroviral combination treatment regimens improve neurocognitive symptoms in HIV-1 infection and substantially lower CSF viral load.

HIV-1 infects the central nervous system (CNS) and it has been feared that the CNS may be a sanctuary site where HIV-1 could hide and continue to replicate despite otherwise effective antiretroviral treatment. Neurological HIV-1 related symptoms, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) viral load, intrathecal immunoactivation and CSF drug concentration measurements are considered in this review of antiretroviral treatment effects on CNS HIV-1 infection. The report concludes that antiretroviral combination treatment regimens improve neurocognitive symptoms in HIV-1 infection and substantially lower CSF viral load. The threat of an increasing number of patients with neurological symptoms and continued HIV-1 replication in the brain despite otherwise effective antiretroviral therapy has not yet proved to be a problem. It is, however, important to keep this potential risk in mind, and more longitudinal prospective studies addressing the issue of antiretroviral treatment effects on CNS HIV-1 infection are needed.

Författare:
Aylin Yilmaz  
Utgiven av:
Sahlgrenska Universitetssjukhuset  
År:
2007
Typ av publikation:
Avhandling  
Språk:
Engelska  
Filstorlek:
786 kB  
: 978-91-628-7194-9
Länk:
Antiretroviral treatment of HIV-1 in the central nervous system
Senast uppdaterad:   2009-08-04    Sidansvarig:  Redaktionen  

   

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