The authors of a recent study hypothesize that HIV’s
initial attack on the brain may be responsible for subsequent cognitive
decline.
November 20, 2017
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While people living with HIV have smaller brain volume as well as
poorer scores on neuropsychological tests compared with their
HIV-negative peers, such a gap does not widen over time if the virus is
well treated with antiretrovirals (ARVs), Reuters Health reports.
Consequently, researchers believe that early treatment of HIV may help
arrest the virus’s early attack on the brain, which itself may set the
stage for cognitive decline.
Publishing their findings
in JAMA Neurology, researchers conducted a study of 48 people with HIV
and 31 HIV-negative individuals who underwent structural MRIs and
neuropsychological tests over about a two-year period. All the
HIV-positive participants were on stable ARVs and had an undetectable
viral load at the study’s outset and the follow-up visit.
After
adjusting the data for age, sex and educational level, the study
authors found that at the beginning of the study, the participants
living with HIV had poorer scores on six out of eight standard
neuropsychological tests.
Both groups of participants
had few changes in their test scores by the end of the study, shifts
that were similar between the groups.
Upon entering the
study, the HIV-positive individuals had smaller cortical thickness and
subcortical volumes in their brains compared with the HIV-negative
participants. With passing time, however, changes in brain volume
charted a similar path between the two study groups.
Having
a lower CD4 nadir (the lowest-ever CD4 count) was associated with
reduced volumes of white matter in the brain as well as smaller volumes
in various brain regions.
To read the Reuters Health article (free registration with Medscape is required), click here.
Read more articles from POZ, here.
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