HIV and AIDS Flashcards

1
Q

How is HIV transmitted ?

A

Mother to child, unscreened blood, sexual, injecting drugs, Organ Donation

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2
Q

What are the two viruses of HIV?

A

HIV 1 and HIV 2

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3
Q

What is the most predominant virus of HIV?

A

HIV1

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4
Q

How does HIV attack the body?

A

HIV virus attached to cells with CD4 on surface and cells with certain chemokine receptors.

The retrovirus converts RNA to DNA which results in virus diversity and persists infection of cell.

Integrase facilites integration into host cell DNA and protease allows virus maturity

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5
Q

How is HIV diagnosed?

A

Antigen and antibody presentation

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6
Q

How is HIV monitored?

A

CD4 lymphocyte count, HIV viral load, clinical features

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7
Q

What occurs when a person begins ARV therapy?

A

Viral load falls but CD4 count rises

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8
Q

What is the trend between severity of illness and CD4 count?

A

Severity of illness is greater when CD4 count is low

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9
Q

What is the CD4 count during AIDS?

A

<200

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10
Q

What is clinical stage 1 of HIV?

A

Asymptomatic with persistent generalised lymphadenopathy

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11
Q

What is clinical stage II of HIV?

A

Weight loss, minor mucocutaneous manifestations, Herpes zoster within last five years, recurrent URTI

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12
Q

What is clinical stage III of HIV ?

A

Weight loss, unexplained chronic diarrhoea, unexplained prolonged fever, oral candidiasis, oral hairy leukoplakia, pulmonary TB within last year, severe bacterial infection,

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13
Q

What is clinical stage IV of HIV ?

A

HIV wasting syndrome, pneumonia, toxoplamsosis of the brain, cryptococcus, cytomegalovirus, HSV, candidiasis of the oesophagus, trachea, bronchi or lungs, extrapulmonary TB, HIV encephalopathy

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14
Q

What is the natural progression of HIV?

A

Acute infection (seroconversion), asymptomatic, HIV related illness, AIDS defining illness, death

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15
Q

What occurs on initial exposure?

A

30-60% of patients have a seroconversion. Usually self-limiting 1-2 weeks and symptoms are usually unspecific

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16
Q

What are symptoms of a seroconversion?

A

flu-like illness, fever, malaise and lethargy, pharyngitis, lymphadenopathy, toxic exanthema

17
Q

What are the symptoms of pneumocystis jiroveci pneumonia?

A

Dry cough and increasing breathlessness over several weeks

18
Q

What are the investigations for pneumocytis jiroveci pneumonia?

A

CXR, Induced sputum, broncoscopy

19
Q

What are the treatments for pneumocytis jiroveci pneumonia?

A

Cotrimoxazole, Pentamidine and prophylaxis until CD4 is over 200

20
Q

What are side effects of nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors?

A

marrow toxicity, neuropathy, lipodystrophy

21
Q

What are side effects of non-nucleosides reverse transcriptase inhibitors?

A

Skin rashes, hypersensitivity, drug interactions, neuropsychiatric effects

22
Q

What are protease inhibitor side effects?

A

Drug interactions, diarrhoea, lipodystrophy, hyperlipidaemia

23
Q

what are side effects of integrase inhibitors?

A

rashes and disturbed sleep