Neurological and neuropsychological performance in HIV seropositive men without symptoms

Ninety five HIV seropositive and 32 seronegative homosexual men were recruited to a prospective study of the early features and natural history of the neurological manifestations of HIV infection. There was no evidence from the initial neurological examination, a neuropsychological test battery, ner...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of neurology, neurosurgery and psychiatry neurosurgery and psychiatry, 1992-02, Vol.55 (2), p.143-148
Hauptverfasser: McAllister, R H, Herns, M V, Harrison, M J, Newman, S P, Connolly, S, Fowler, C J, Fell, M, Durrance, P, Manji, H, Kendall, B E
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container_end_page 148
container_issue 2
container_start_page 143
container_title Journal of neurology, neurosurgery and psychiatry
container_volume 55
creator McAllister, R H
Herns, M V
Harrison, M J
Newman, S P
Connolly, S
Fowler, C J
Fell, M
Durrance, P
Manji, H
Kendall, B E
description Ninety five HIV seropositive and 32 seronegative homosexual men were recruited to a prospective study of the early features and natural history of the neurological manifestations of HIV infection. There was no evidence from the initial neurological examination, a neuropsychological test battery, nerve conduction studies, somatosensory evoked potentials from the legs, P300 event related auditory evoked potentials, magnetic stimulation of the motor cortex, or MRI scans that HIV infected men without symptoms in CDC groups II/III differed significantly from a well matched seronegative comparison group. Only the subgroup in CDC IV showed evidence of impairment, and this was restricted to their performance on some of the cognitive tests. The results imply that, despite early invasion of the CNS by HIV, major disturbances of function manifest themselves only when the patient becomes immunosuppressed. The importance of an appropriate comparison group and awareness of the potentially confounding influences such as age, education, exposure to alcohol and drugs, and mood and anxiety in such studies is stressed. The essentially negative findings are important in the understanding of the pathogenesis of neurological effect in HIV infection and in the design and interpretation of therapeutic trials.
doi_str_mv 10.1136/jnnp.55.2.143
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subjects Age Factors
AIDS Dementia Complex - diagnosis
AIDS Dementia Complex - psychology
AIDS/HIV
Biological and medical sciences
Bisexuality
Cognition Disorders - diagnosis
Cross-Sectional Studies
Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Brain Stem
HIV Seropositivity - diagnosis
HIV Seropositivity - psychology
Homosexuality
Humans
Immunodeficiencies
Immunodeficiencies. Immunoglobulinopathies
Immunopathology
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
Medical sciences
Neurologic Examination
Neuropsychological Tests
Prevalence
Zidovudine - therapeutic use
title Neurological and neuropsychological performance in HIV seropositive men without symptoms
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