Middle-aged people living with the virus have a
higher rate of silent cerebral small-vessel disease than their
HIV-negative peers.
January 24, 2018
•
By
Benjamin Ryan
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Middle-aged people living with HIV have a higher risk of silent
cerebral small-vessel disease (CSVD), which is a key warning sign that
an individual may progress to more serious neurocognitive conditions,
aidsmap reports.
Publishing their findings in Clinical
Infectious Diseases, French researchers conducted a cross-sectional
study of 456 HIV-positive individuals age 50 and older and 156 matched
controls who did not have the virus. They used MRIs to detect CSVD and
severe CSVD. The participants were recruited between 2013 and 2016.
All
the HIV-positive participants were on successful long-term
antiretroviral treatment. The study excluded those who were coinfected
with hepatitis C virus (HCV), had a substance abuse disorder and who had
been diagnosed with a neurological disease.
Fifty-two
percent of the people living with HIV had CSVD compared with 36 percent
of the control subjects. One fifth of the group with HIV and 14 percent
of the HIV-negative group had a severe case.
After
adjusting their data to account for age, sex, alcohol use, blood
pressure, blood lipids and cardiovascular disease, the researchers found
that having HIV was associated with a 2.3-fold increased risk of CSVD.
There was no such association between HIV and severe CSVD.
Among those living with HIV, having had a lowest-ever CD4 count below 200 was associated with a 1.5-fold increased risk of CSVD.
To read the aidsmap article, click here.
To read the study abstract, click here.
More from POZ,here
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