HIV/AIDS
Appearance
Epidemiology
[edit | edit source]- 26800 people with HIV in Australia
- Highest concentration amongst gay men and IVDU
- <0.1% female sex workers
Risk factors
[edit | edit source]- High viral load for all forms of transmission
- Risky sexual behaviour
Aetiology
[edit | edit source]- HIV virus acquired through sexual contact, exposure to infected blood or perinatal transmission
Pathophysiology
[edit | edit source]- Retrovirus
- Binds to CD4+ cells (T-helper lymphocytes, monocytes and macrophages)
- Capsid is released into the cell and reverse transcriptase returns viral RNA to DNA incorporated into the cell genome
- Viral replication by the normal cell mechanisms releases more capsids and increased viral load
- Cytotoxic T cells recognise infected T-cells and cause lysis or induce apoptosis causing reduced CD4+ cells and overall immunity
Classification (CDC)
[edit | edit source]- Stage 1 - CD4 count >500microL
- Stage 2 - CD4 could 200-499
- Stage 3 - CD4 count <200
- AIDS is the presence of confirmed HIV infection with stage 3 disease and the presence of opportunistic infections
Presentation
[edit | edit source]- Asymptomatic 10-60%
- Acute retroviral syndrome (seroconversion)
- Fever, lymphadenopathy, pharyngitis, rash, headache
- Self-resolving
- Clinical latency period (3-20 years)
- Development of AIDS
Diagnosis
[edit | edit source]- HIV immunoassay
- HIV PCR (viral load assessment if positive immunoassay)
- Pre and post-test counselling
Management
[edit | edit source]- Antiretroviral combination therapy for all HIV+ patients regardless of immune status
- Improves symptoms
- Improved immune function
- Reduced transmission risk
- Drug resistance testing can improve regimen selected
Opportunistic infections
[edit | edit source]- Pneumocystis pneumonia
- Cachexia
- Oesophageal candidiasis
- Encephalitis/meningitis/retinitis
- Kaposi's sarcoma
- Burkitt's lymphoma
Surgical issues
[edit | edit source]- Upcoming elective surgery
- Current opportunistic infections
- Viral load
- Nutritional status
- Continue antiretrovirals
- Post-op risks
- Poor wound healing
- Sepsis
- Poor nutrition
- Risk of HIV transmission to the health worker