Morbidity and nutritional impairment in relation to CD4 count in a Zambian population with high HIV prevalence

The HIV epidemic has greatly increased morbidity in many African cities and severe undernutrition is a prominent feature of the clinical presentation. However, there is little information about the relationship of morbidity or nutritional status to immune damage at a population level. We report a cr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Acta tropica 2002-08, Vol.83 (2), p.151-158
Hauptverfasser: Kelly, Paul, Zulu, Isaac, Amadi, Beatrice, Munkanta, Mwansa, Banda, Jacqueline, Rodrigues, Laura C, Mabey, David, Feldman, Roger, Farthing, Michael J.G
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container_end_page 158
container_issue 2
container_start_page 151
container_title Acta tropica
container_volume 83
creator Kelly, Paul
Zulu, Isaac
Amadi, Beatrice
Munkanta, Mwansa
Banda, Jacqueline
Rodrigues, Laura C
Mabey, David
Feldman, Roger
Farthing, Michael J.G
description The HIV epidemic has greatly increased morbidity in many African cities and severe undernutrition is a prominent feature of the clinical presentation. However, there is little information about the relationship of morbidity or nutritional status to immune damage at a population level. We report a cross-sectional study of morbidity and nutritional status in relation to CD4 count in an impoverished urban community in Lusaka, Zambia, at enrolment into a longitudinal study. Over a 2 month period in 1999, 261 (52%) of 506 adults resident in one area were interviewed and examined. Of 186 adults who consented to testing, 33 (51%) of 65 who were HIV seropositive reported symptoms of disease compared to 39 (32%) of 121 who were HIV seronegative (OR 2.2, 95%CI 1.1–4.2; P=0.02). Peripheral blood CD4 counts in HIV seronegative individuals were broadly similar to norms in developed countries, but 8 (7%) had CD4 counts below 500 cells/μl. Morbidity in HIV seropositive adults was dominated by tuberculosis ( n=11), other respiratory infections (5) or persistent diarrhoea (4), and affected individuals had a wide range of CD4 counts. Nutritional impairment was evident in HIV seropositive adults with clinical evidence of opportunistic infection (OI), not those with asymptomatic HIV infection. Unexpectedly, we also noted that systolic blood pressure was reduced progressively in HIV infection and in those with OI. In conclusion, HIV-related morbidity was dominated by a small number of treatable infectious diseases occurring over a wide range of CD4 count. Nutritional impairment was associated with OI.
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Nutritional impairment was evident in HIV seropositive adults with clinical evidence of opportunistic infection (OI), not those with asymptomatic HIV infection. Unexpectedly, we also noted that systolic blood pressure was reduced progressively in HIV infection and in those with OI. In conclusion, HIV-related morbidity was dominated by a small number of treatable infectious diseases occurring over a wide range of CD4 count. 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source MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Adult
Africa
Analysis of Variance
Antibodies, Viral - isolation & purification
Biological and medical sciences
Blood Pressure
CD4 count
CD4 Lymphocyte Count
Cross-Sectional Studies
Female
HIV
HIV - immunology
HIV Infections - epidemiology
Human viral diseases
Humans
Infectious diseases
Male
Medical sciences
Middle Aged
Morbidity
Nutrition
Nutritional Status
Prevalence
Public health
Tropical medicine
Urban Population
Viral diseases
Viral diseases of the lymphoid tissue and the blood. Aids
Zambia - epidemiology
title Morbidity and nutritional impairment in relation to CD4 count in a Zambian population with high HIV prevalence
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