Stroke in HIV patients
From IDWiki
Background
Etiologies
- Routine causes
- Large artery atherosclerotic disease (11 to 42%)
- Small-vessel disease (2 to 35%)
- Cardioembolic (3 to 19%)
- Infectious (3 to 25%), including (from most to least common): VZV, infective endocarditis, tuberculosis, syphilis, meningitis not otherwise specified, cryptococcosis, toxoplasmosis, bacterial meningitis, mucormycosis, other opportunistic infection
- Other causes (2 to 27%), including (from most to least common): vasculitis, cocaine use, non-atherosclerotic vasculopathy, multiple etiologies, arterial dissection, medication use, sickle cell crisis, carcinomatous meningitis, carotid stump syndrome
- Cryptogenic (10 to 32%)
Investigations
- Assess for rash, manifestations of neurosyphilis, signs of infection
- Laboratory investigations
- If indicated, lumbar puncture for cell count, protein, glucose, and other infectious workup
- CBC, CD4, HIV viral load, ESR/CRP, ANA, ANCA, antiphospholipid antibodies, syphilis serology
- Blood cultures
- Toxoplasma IgG if not previously documented
- As indicated, other infectious serologies
- Imaging and other procedures
- Brain imaging including vasculature
- Chest x-ray
- Echocardiography
- ECG
- Cardiac rhythm monitoring
Management
- Check for drug-drug interactions
- Antiplatelet therapy
- Ritonavir and cobicistat interact with clopidogrel and ticagrelor; preference is for aspirin and/or prasugrel
- Statins
- Ritonavir and cobicistat increase levels of all statins; recommendation is atorvastatin or rosuvastatin at a maximum of 10 to 20 mg p.o. daily, with close monitoring for adverse effects (see HIV.gov guidelines)
- Antiplatelet therapy
Further Reading
- Stroke in HIV. Can J Cardiol. 2019 Mar;35(3):280-287. doi: 10.1016/j.cjca.2018.11.032. PMID: 30825950; PMCID: PMC6400325.