Human immunodeficiency virus: Difference between revisions
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m (Aidan moved page Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) to Human immunodeficiency virus) |
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* Acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) is a severe form of HIV characterized by low CD4 count resulting in characteristic infections |
* Acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) is a severe form of HIV characterized by low CD4 count resulting in characteristic infections |
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= Microbiology = |
== Microbiology == |
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* A member of the Retroviridae family |
* A member of the Retroviridae family |
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== Clades / Subtypes == |
=== Clades / Subtypes === |
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* HIV-1 |
* HIV-1 |
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* HIV-2 |
* HIV-2 |
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= Life Cycle = |
== Life Cycle == |
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* Two phases: initial viral attachment, fusion, reverse transcription, and integration; and the following lifetime of the viral infection |
* Two phases: initial viral attachment, fusion, reverse transcription, and integration; and the following lifetime of the viral infection |
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* HIV enters from the mucosa to infect activated Langerhans macrophages, which then get to the local lymphoid tissue |
* HIV enters from the mucosa to infect activated Langerhans macrophages, which then get to the local lymphoid tissue |
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= Epidemiology = |
== Epidemiology == |
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* 63,000 Canadians living with HIV in 2016 |
* 63,000 Canadians living with HIV in 2016 |
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** Heterosexual sex (33% of cases) |
** Heterosexual sex (33% of cases) |
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= Risk Factors = |
== Risk Factors == |
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* High-risk exposures |
* High-risk exposures |
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* Prior STIs |
* Prior STIs |
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= Presentation = |
== Presentation == |
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== Acute seroconversion == |
=== Acute seroconversion === |
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* Influenza-like illness |
* Influenza-like illness |
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* ... |
* ... |
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== Chronic HIV == |
=== Chronic HIV === |
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* Fever |
* Fever |
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* [Opportunistic infections](Complications/Opportunistic infections/Opportunistic infections.md) |
* [Opportunistic infections](Complications/Opportunistic infections/Opportunistic infections.md) |
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= Investigations = |
== Investigations == |
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* HIV serology |
* HIV serology |
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* HIV viral load and CD4 count |
* HIV viral load and CD4 count |
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= Management = |
== Management == |
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== Initial management == |
=== Initial management === |
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* [[First clinic visit for HIV]] |
* [[First clinic visit for HIV]] |
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* [[HIV treatment]] |
* [[HIV treatment]] |
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== Follow-up == |
=== Follow-up === |
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* HIV viral load |
* HIV viral load |
Revision as of 20:17, 15 August 2019
- A chronic immunodeficiency resulting from infection with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
- Acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) is a severe form of HIV characterized by low CD4 count resulting in characteristic infections
Microbiology
- A member of the Retroviridae family
Clades / Subtypes
- HIV-1
- M group
- Clade A: common in East Africa
- Clade B: is common in Canada, Americas, Europe
- M group
- HIV-2
Life Cycle
- Two phases: initial viral attachment, fusion, reverse transcription, and integration; and the following lifetime of the viral infection
- Initial cellular infection
- Binding or attachment of the virion gp120 Env surface protein to the CD4 receptor with CCR5 or CXCR4 coreceptor (on macrophage or T-cell, respectively).
- Binding the receptor triggers a conformational change that exposes the fusion domain on gp41, which facilitates fusion and viral entry. The proceeding viral disassembly requires viral protein p24 to bind to cellular cyclophilin A.
- In the cytoplasm, reverse transcriptase converts viral RNA into viral DNA. The RNA is degraded, then the complementary strand of DNA created.
- The preintegration complex of double-stranded DNA is imported into the nucleus using viral Gag, viral protein R (Vpr), and integrase. Unlike other retroviruses, HIV does not require active replication to enter the nucleus.
- Infection of lymphoid cells and lymph nodes, especially gut-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT)
- Infection therefore kills a large proportion of CD4 cells in the gut
- HIV enters from the mucosa to infect activated Langerhans macrophages, which then get to the local lymphoid tissue
Epidemiology
- 63,000 Canadians living with HIV in 2016
- 14% don't know they have it
- Methods of acquisition in Canada
- MSM (52% of cases)
- People who inject drugs (17% of cases)
- Heterosexual sex (33% of cases)
Risk Factors
- High-risk exposures
- MSM
- Multiple partners
- Injection drug use
- Sex work
- Aboriginal Canadians (2.7x higher incidence)
- African and Caribbean people (endemic countries)
- Prior STIs
Presentation
Acute seroconversion
- Influenza-like illness
- Rash
- ...
Chronic HIV
- Fever
- Weight loss
- Dyspnea, cough, hemoptysis
- Dysphagia, diarrhea
- Anemia, neutropenia, thrombocytopenia
- Metabolic derangements
- [Opportunistic infections](Complications/Opportunistic infections/Opportunistic infections.md)
Investigations
- HIV serology
- If concern for acute seroconversion syndrome, may need to repeat serology
- HIV viral load and CD4 count
Management
Initial management
Follow-up
- HIV viral load
- Every 4 to 6 weeks until undetectable
- Then every 3 months until undetectable for 1 year
- Then every 6 months
- CD4 count
- Every 3 to 4 months until viral load undetectable and CD4 count >350 for 1 year
- Then every 6 months until viral load undetectable for at least 2 years and CD4 count > 500
- Then stop monitoring routinely unless evidence of treatment failure
- Assess for failure if RNA level remains detectable at 24 weeks or if it increases to above 50 at any time
- Repeat RNA level within 4 weeks