10. HIV Flashcards

1
Q

what are the common symptoms of HIV that usually only occur in HIV?

A

Oral candidiasis
Kaposi’s sarcoma
Pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP)

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2
Q

What is HIV?

A

Human immunodeficiency virus

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3
Q

Describe HIV

A

Retrovirus - ssRNA -> DNA -> ssRNA
Infects cells with CD4 surface receptor
HIV replicates inside cells, destroys cell, causes inflammation and spreads to/infects more cells

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4
Q

Does HIV work?

A
  1. Free virus
  2. Binding and fusion - virus binds to CD4 molecule and one of 2 coreceptors (CCR5 or CXCR4), common on cell surface then virus fuses with cell
  3. Infection - virus penetrates cell, contents emptied into cell
  4. Reverse transcription - single strands of viral RNA are converted into double stranded DNA by reverse transcriptase enzyme
  5. Integration - viral DNA is combined with cell’s own DNA by integrate enzyme
  6. Transcription - when infected cell divides, viral DNA is read and long chains of proteins are made
  7. Assembly - sets of viral protein chains come together
  8. Budding - immature virus pushes out of cell, taking some cell membrane with it
  9. Immature virus breaks free of infected cell
  10. Maturation - protein chains in new viral particle cut by protease enzyme into individual proteins that combine to make a working virus
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5
Q

How is HIV transmitted?

A

Contact of infected bodily fluids with mucosal tissue/blood/broken skin
From sex, blood transfusion, contaminated needles, perinatal transmission

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6
Q

What are the 4 stages of HIV?

A

Primary infection/sercoconversion
Latent infection
Symptomatic infection
Severe infection/AIDS

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7
Q

What are the main symptoms of acute HIV infection?

A

Fever, weight loss, mouth sores or thrush, myalgia, liver and spleen enlargement, nausea, vomiting, rash, lymphadenopathy, headache, neuropathy

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8
Q

What are some conditions associated with severe HIV?

A
Cryptococcal meningitis
Toxoplasmosis
Cold sores and ulcers
Oral candidiasis
Hyperglycaemia
Histoplasmosis
PCP
TB
Osteoporosis 
Heart disease
HCV
HPV
PID
HIV wasting syndrome
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9
Q

What are the factors affecting HIV transmission?

A

Type of exposure - type of sexual act, transfusion vs needle stick vs mucous membrane
Viral level in blood - transmission unlikely if undetectable VL
Condom use
Breaks in skin or mucosa - other STI, sexual assault

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10
Q

What can help a patient live to the average HIV life expectancy of 78?

A

Early detection
Treatment
Adherence
Healthy living - smoking, alcohol, metabolic problems

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11
Q

What are the 2 diagnostic blood tests that can be done for HIV?

A

Serology - HIV antigen, HIV antibody, +ve in 4 weeks, result on same day, may get false negative result
PCR - detects HIV nucleic acid, detects very early infection, expensive, results slow, used for follow up

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12
Q

What is the rapid tests for HIV?

A
Low cost, <1 hr
Detect HIV antibody
Blood test (finger-prick)
Oral
Home testing kits
Postal testing
If negative - accurate
May get false positive result
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13
Q

What strategies would you use to reduce prevalence of HIV?

A

Anti-retro viral drugs (ARVs)

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14
Q

What are the aims of HIV treatment?

A
Undetectable HIV viral load
Reconstitute CD4 count/immune system
Reduce general inflammation
Reduce risk of transmission
Good quality of life
Normalise lifespan
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15
Q

When should treatment be started?

A

ASAP, regardless of CD4

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16
Q

Which ARVs should be given?

A

2 nucleoside reserve transcriptase inhibitors (NRTI)

1 of either on-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI), protease inhibitor or integrate inhibitor

17
Q

Why give 3 ARVs?

A
Millions of rounds of viral replication each day
Virus mutates every 2-3 rounds
Resistance to drugs develops in days
1 drug - resistance develops quickly
3 drugs - harder to develop resistance
Patient must keep taking drugs
18
Q

What strategies would you use to treat and reduce prevalence of HIV?

A
Increase condom usage
ARV treatment as prevention
Wide-spread testing/screening
Prevention of vertical transmission
Post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP)
Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP)