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HIV

Patho

QuestionAnswer
home of 70% of world's total cases of HIV Sub-Saharan Africa
the most common strain of HIV type I
most common in West Africa; and progresses more slowly type II
parasitic retrovirus that infects CD4 and macrophages upon entry HIV
virus is reproducingm, usually for several years latency phase
what is the best measure of HIV progression? measure viral load
the two HIV antibody tests that check to see if you are positive ELISA and the Western Blot Assay
what does ELISA stand for? Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
what measures how much HIV is present? polymerase chain reaction- PCR (good for mothers and infants)
what are the 2 classifications of HIV? lab findings and S/S
lab findings: category 1 >500 cells/microl
lab findings: category 2 200-499 cells/microl
lab findings: category 3 <200 cells/microl
clinical: category A no s/s or have lymphadenopathy or s/s of primary HIV
clinical: category B s/s of immune deficiency but not serious enough to be AIDS
clinical: category C AIDS defining illnessess present
how often are labs performed (PCR and CD4 checks) 3-6 months
seroconversion, flu-like s/s, occurs 2-4 weeks after infection, last few days to 2 weeks primary infection/acute clinical syndrome
average 10 years, CD4 levels slowly drop, lymphadenopathy chronic asymptomatic/latency
w/o tx leads to death in 2-3 years overt AIDS
most common opportunistic infection of AIDS PCP- HIV pnemonia (bacteria everywhere)
caused by AIDS rather than an opp. infection; is very aggressive; destroys brain cells; late onset; S/S: impaired attention, apathetic behavior, behavioral changes AIDS dementia complex
parasite affecting CNS toxoplasmosis
harmless in the healthy individual, but causes severe problems in the immnuosuppressed and is an orgainism common in the soil, houses, and many other environments PCP- HIV pnemonia (bacteria everywhere)
leading cause of death in HIV pt TB
Demylinating white matter disease caused by JC virus, a DNA papovavirus that attacks the oligodendrocytes progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy
Ca of the epithelial cells of the skin, mucous membranes, GI tract, and lungs; simialr to the herpes virus, and has painless lesions with purple hue Kaposi's sarcoma
Metabolic disorder that causes changes in body appearance including increased abdominal girth, buffalo hump, wasting of the fat in the face and extremities, & breast enlargement in both sexes lipodystrophy
R/T antiretroviral therapy-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors causes lactic acid build up d/t anaerobic metabolism mitochondrial disorders
treatment options for AIDS no cure, but can prevent progression with HAART therapy
what kind of testing is best for those younger than 18 months PCR
what is required to make a HIV diagonsis? 2 positives from testing for HIV
what is very effective during pregnacy that helps lower transmission rates? Zidovudine
what can a baby test for positive in an ELISA test for up to 18 months of life? b/c the test can pick up the mother's IgG and the baby may not be truely positive
Phase of HIV when the CD4 levels slowly begin to drop Chronic asymptomatic/latency stage
tacypnea fast breathing
ataxia "drunk" walk
diplopia double vision
Created by: TayBay15
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