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- $Unique_ID{BRK02992}
- $Pretitle{}
- $Title{AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, part I)}
- $Subject{AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome) AIDS DISORDER SUBDIVISIONS
- AIDS AIDS related complex, also known as ARC, AIDS prodrome, Wasting/Lymph
- Node Syndrome, and Mini-AIDS}
- $Volume{}
- $Log{}
-
- Copyright (C) 1986, 1987, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993 National Organization
- for Rare Disorders, Inc.
-
- 78:
- AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome), part I
-
-
- ** IMPORTANT **
- It is possible that the main title of the article (Acquired Immune
- Deficiency Syndrome) is not the name you expected. Please check the SYNONYMS
- listing to find the alternate names and disorder subdivisions covered by this
- article.
-
- Synonyms
-
- AIDS
-
- DISORDER SUBDIVISIONS
-
- AIDS
- AIDS related complex, also known as ARC, AIDS prodrome, Wasting/Lymph
- Node Syndrome, and Mini-AIDS
-
- General Discussion
-
- ** REMINDER **
- The information contained in the Rare Disease Database is provided for
- educational purposes only. It should not be used for diagnostic or treatment
- purposes. If you wish to obtain more information about this disorder, please
- contact your personal physician and/or the agencies listed in the "Resources"
- section of this report.
-
-
- In the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) the body's ability to
- ward off infection progressively deteriorates. Organisms which in a healthy
- person would either fail to cause disease, cause mild disease, or at least
- provoke immunity, completely overwhelm the AIDS patient. Patients with
- severe AIDS also contract various uncommon, life threatening infections,
- particularly pneumocystis carinii pneumonia, and have an unusually high
- incidence of a rare cancer, Kaposi's sarcoma. Individuals in the early
- stages of the disease are unusually susceptible to many milder infections.
-
- Symptoms
-
- AIDS may be preceded by a period of asymptomatic immune abnormalities, or by
- a prodromal state lasting as long as 36 months. This "AIDS related complex"
- is characterized by otherwise unexplained lymphadenopathy (swelling and
- disease of lymph nodes) for a period of at least three months, recurrent flu-
- like symptoms, fatigue and malaise, loss of weight or appetite, fever, night
- sweats, unexplained diarrhea, or diarrhea due to amebiasis, idiopathic
- thrombocytopenic purpura in some cases, and an unusual susceptibility to mild
- infections. Commonly, infections are by yeasts such as oral thrush, by
- amoebas, fungi, viruses such as Herpes Zoster and molluscum contagiosum, and
- staphylococcus bacteria, leading to purulent skin infections.
-
- Researchers now believe the AIDS virus may be present in a patient as
- much as 5 to 7 years before symptoms appear. In 1988, scientists at the
- federal Centers for Disease Control (CDC) in Atlanta, GA, reported many
- individuals infected with the AIDS virus show a sharp increase in virus-
- infected white blood cells in the year before these patients develop the full
- blown disease. A decrease of one type of disease-fighting white blood cells
- known as T-4 helper cells also occurs as the infection progresses. Other
- studies have suggested that increases in chemicals in the blood signaling
- viral reproduction might serve as clues to early diagnosis of AIDS in
- susceptible patients.
-
- Full blown AIDS continues to manifest fever, wasting, lymphadenopathy,
- and susceptibility to infections. The infections become much more severe,
- however, and are often due to uncommon organisms. They may be difficult to
- treat, and if treated successfully, may still recur repeatedly. Several
- infections often coexist. A particularly serious threat is infection by the
- protozoan pneumocystis carinii. Serious infections may also be viral,
- bacterial, or fungal. See table below.
-
- VIRAL INFECTIONS:
- Cytomegalovirus
- Herpes simplex virus types I and II
- Epstein-Barr virus (normally associated with mononucleosis)
- Varicella-Zoster (normally associated with Chicken Pox)
- Papova virus
-
- BACTERIAL INFECTIONS:
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis (the organism causing tuberculosis)
- Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare
- Legionella pneumophilus (the organism causing Legionnaire's disease)
- Klebsiella pneumonae
-
- FUNGAL INFECTIONS
- Candida albicans (yeast infection)
- Cryptococcus neoformans
- Aspergillus species
- Histoplasma capsulata
-
- PROTOZOAN INFECTIONS:
- Pneumocystis carinii
- Toxoplasma gondii
- Entamoeba histolytica ("amoebas")
- Giardia lamblia (causes diarrhea)
- Cryptosporidium
- Isopora bellii
-
- Pneumonias, central nervous system infections, involvement of the eyes,
- particularly the retina, gastrointestinal symptoms (especially persistent
- diarrhea) and general wasting, fever, and weakness may be one or more of
- these organisms. Often diagnosis is difficult because symptoms and signs of
- the infections in the immunosuppressed patient differ from those in
- immunologically normal individuals.
-
- Malignant neoplasms are also characteristic of AIDS. Kaposi's sarcoma is
- especially common, occurring in as many as 37% of the patients. In this type
- of cancer, the skin and often the viscera are covered with small brown
- plaques and nodules representing vascular tumors. Patients who have only
- Kaposi's Sarcoma have a somewhat better prognosis than those with
- opportunistic infections, apparently because their immune systems retain
- slightly better function. Other cancers associated with AIDS include certain
- malignant undifferentiated and differentiated lymphomas, such as Hodgkin's
- disease, and carcinomas of certain cells of the tongue and rectum.
-
- Another feature of AIDS is a decrease in the total number of lymphocytes
- (cells responsible for immunity) in the blood. An absence of allergic skin
- reactions and abnormalities in the relative numbers and functioning of the
- different kinds of lymphocytes in the circulation also indicate cellular
- immunodeficiency. Evidence of exposure to the causative virus and abnormal
- proportions of the different lymphocyte types has been found in many members
- of the groups at risk for AIDS. Clearly, not all these people develop the
- disease.
-
- Recent research suggests that as many as 60% of AIDS patients may develop
- dementia. The dementia may occur at any age. According to the National
- Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, as the number of patients
- affected by the AIDS retrovirus continues to grow, the associated
- neurological syndromes are recognized with increasing frequency.
- Neurological involvement may be apparent before severe immunodeficiency is
- recognized.
-
- Dementia is one of the more common and devastating neurological
- complications of AIDS. As many as 60 percent of patients with AIDS may
- develop dementia that cannot be attributed to opportunistic infections. The
- dementia may occur at any stage; it is often manifested very early in the
- clinical course of the illness. Some of these patients also develop spastic
- paraplegia and ataxia associated with vacuolar changes in the myelin of the
- spinal cord.
-
- Infection with the AIDS retrovirus is also associated with the
- development of peripheral nerve disease in a lesser number of patients.
- Although neuropathy may affect 10 percent or more of patients with AIDS, the
- clinical and pathological features are not completely characterized. The
- spectrum of symptom complexes includes sensory and motor neuropathies and
- multiple mononeuropathy.
-
- Developmental abnormalities in children with AIDS, characterized by loss
- of cognitive ability and progressive long-tract signs, are now encountered
- with increasing frequency. An AIDS-associated dysmorphic syndrome in
- children due to intrauterine infection has also been described.
-
- Researchers have found that the drug DHPG (dihdroxypropoxymethyl guanine)
- is effective against cytomegalovirus retinitis in AIDS patients. The
- patient's eye sight often can be protected by this treatment.
-
- For more information on AIDS, see the articles in the AIDS Update section
- of NORD Services.
-
- Causes
-
- AIDS is caused by a Human T-cell Leukemia Virus, known as HIV or human
- immunodeficiency virus (previously the virus was referred to as HTLV-III).
- Its transmission is not well understood, but is probably via the introduction
- into the body of fluids from an infected person, i.e. via blood transfusions
- (rare), sharing of contaminated needles, and intimate sexual contact, but
- apparently not via saliva. About 55% of the homosexual population in certain
- communities have been found to have antibodies to HIV, suggesting that,
- although exposure to it has been widespread, some other cofactors may be
- necessary for AIDS or its prodrome to develop. Possible cofactors include
- genetic predisposition and coinfection by cytomegalovirus or Epstein-Barr
- virus. These viruses are also linked with many of the cancers associated
- with AIDS. Cytomegalovirus, for example, is suspected to be responsible for
- Kaposi's sarcoma.
-
- Kaposi's sarcoma, immunologic evidence of exposure or infection with HIV,
- and AIDS-like syndromes are exceptionally common among both sexes in central
- Africa, and it has been suggested that the disease originated there.
-
- At an October, 1986, AIDS conference at Montefiore Medical Center in New
- York, researchers reported the proportion of American AIDS cases clearly
- traced to heterosexual intercourse is two percent, up from one percent in
- earlier years of the epidemic. Intravenous drug addicts and their sex
- partners are the primary sources of AIDS infection among heterosexuals. Four
- out of five cases reported among this group are women. Among immigrant cases
- in this country, the proportion attributed to heterosexual contact is four
- percent. Three percent of cases seem to have no explained cause, but there
- are questions as to accurate admission by these patients of past drug use
- and/or sexual practices.
-
- In New York City, as of Sept. 15, 1986, only two percent of AIDS cases
- were attributed to heterosexual contact. Eighty percent of these patients
- are black or Hispanic.
-
- Data from blood donors screened from April through December, 1985 in New
- York City revealed 0.08 percent had antibodies to the AIDS virus, a sign of
- infection. Further investigation revealed that ninety percent of those with
- the virus had homosexual or drug experience, or a sex partner who did. In
- only eleven cases, could the source of infection not be identified.
-
- In tests of military applicants in New York City from October, 1985
- through July 1986, 1.06 percent of men and 0.83 percent of women had evidence
- of AIDS infection. Most of these infections could be traced to homosexual
- contact or drug use and the proportion attributed to heterosexual relations
- was "minor."
-
- Growing statistics support the conclusion of some researchers that the
- passage of the AIDS virus from female to male during intercourse is extremely
- rare.
-
- However, two new studies on risks of unprotected intercourse with a virus
- carrier have raised some puzzling questions. One study found that half or
- more of steady, long-term heterosexual partners of AIDS patients with no
- other possible exposure, were also infected. The virus seemed to pass as
- readily from women to men as the reverse, and ordinary vaginal intercourse
- was a sufficient means.
-
- Sixteen AIDS patients in one of these studies continued to have
- unprotected intercourse from one to three years. Thirteen of their partners
- became infected, for a transmission rate of over eighty percent. Of twelve
- AIDS patients and their partners who continued having sex but used condoms,
- the infection spread in only two cases. This low rate of transmission seems
- disturbing given the presumed safety of condoms. In both of the latter
- cases, the virus spread from man to woman. Oral sex involving semen
- discharges might be to blame.
-
- Some studies find inconsistent rates of sexual spread of the AIDS virus
- depending on how the first partner became infected. The virus was passed
- through intercourse far more readily from drug abusers than from people
- exposed by contaminated blood products in one study. Another study indicated
- that rates of infection may vary among individuals or in the same person over
- time.
-
- Available evidence indicates that the likelihood of viral transmission in
- a single heterosexual encounter is "less than one percent." Scientists
- suspect that the virus spreads more easily in anal intercourse, which more
- often involves tearing of tissue that would aid the entry of the virus into
- the bloodstream. For anyone having sex with multiple partners, the danger of
- infection with the AIDS virus is rising dramatically.
-
- Recent evidence suggests that the AIDS virus can live in insect hosts
- such as mosquitoes and other blood-sucking insects. However, there is no
- evidence that these insects can transfer the virus to humans. To date, no
- case of AIDS has been linked to an insect bite in the United States.
-
- Affected Population
-
- AIDS is now known to be caused by a virus. As of December, 1991, the CDC
- reported that approximately one million Americans are infected with the AIDS
- virus; 206,392 cases of AIDS have been diagnosed and 133,232 deaths from AIDS
- have occurred in the United States. The population at highest risk for AIDS
- comprises homosexual or bisexual males. Other high risk populations include
- past or present intravenous drug abusers, blood transfusion or blood product
- recipients, including hemophiliacs, female sexual partners of bisexual males
- or IV drug abusers, or women who themselves are IV drug abusers, and children
- whose parents are in one of the other risk groups. Most cases have occurred
- in the United States, but several hundred cases have been reported from
- Europe, the Caribbean, and Africa. Although there is a high incidence of
- AIDS in Haiti, Haitians in United States are no longer considered to be a
- risk category of individuals. It is possible that the disease originated in
- central Africa.
-
- NOTES FROM NORD
-
- According to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), 980 children have
- been diagnosed with AIDS as of May 1988. Some of these acquired the disease
- in the womb from infected mothers, and some contracted the disease from blood
- transfusions before the AIDS blood screening program was initiated in 1985.
- A recent study of 20 children who contracted the AIDS virus through
- transfusions before 1985 indicated that one-third of the children have died
- or are ill with AIDS, one-third show no sign of the illness, and one-third
- have more than the usual number of childhood infectious diseases but their
- health is within the normal range of children their age. This data compares
- to adults with the AIDS virus; one-third of carriers have died or are ill
- with AIDS five to six years after infection.
-
- A pregnant woman with AIDS always passes the AIDS antibodies to her
- fetus, but she only passes the actual virus to the baby forth percent of the
- time. When the babies become fifteen months old, they start making their own
- antibodies if the virus is present.
-
- There is no way to predict which babies of infected mothers will get the
- AIDS virus. To date, sixty percent of children born to mothers with AIDS
- antibodies show no sign of infection.
-
- Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome can no longer be regarded as a
- disease restricted to certain populations. However, major cities seem to
- have higher numbers of reported cases. Nationally, 4 in 10,000 persons are
- affected, with thirteen men to one woman contracting this disorder. In
- Manhattan (New York City), there are 200 cases for every 10,000 persons.
- These statistics are based on data from blood banks. The uninfected partner
- of a person with AIDS will have a forty to fifty percent chance of contacting
- the disease.
-
- Therapies: Standard
-
- The treatment of choice for AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome) is the
- Orphan Drug Zidovudine, Brand name Retrovir (formerly known as azidothymidine
- or AZT). The drug appears to halt the progression of AIDS (and in some cases
- allows the immune system to rebuild itself) by inhibiting production of an
- essential enzyme that is necessary for the AIDS virus to reproduce itself.
- (A $30 million emergency fund to help low-income AIDS patients buy AZT, has
- been established by the Health Resources and Services Administration.
- Eligibility will be determined by states; for more information, call (800)
- 843-9388). In 1990, AZT was approved by the FDA in treating pediatric AIDS
- patients as young as six months old. The drug was approved in 1987 for
- patients 13 years of age and older. The combination therapy of AZT
- (Retrovir) with Hoffman LaRoche's HIVID (DDC) has been approved by the FDA.
- This combination therapy is more effective than AZT alone.
-
- The primary treatment for AIDS is prevention. Use of condoms and changes
- in sexual behavior are recommended. Promiscuous sex may increase the
- likelihood of contracting AIDS.
-
- Many of the infections associated with AIDS respond to antibiotic,
- antifungal, etc., treatment, although recurrences are very common. Nystatin,
- clotrimazole, and ketoconazole have controlled episodes of esophageal and
- oral candidiasis. In this fungal infection as well as in cryptococcal
- meningitis, amphotericin-B has been useful. Herpes simplex has responded to
- a course of treatment with acyclovir. Toxoplasmosis may be controlled in
- some cases with sulfadiazine or pyrimethamine, although these drugs have
- immunosuppressive effects and thus may render the patient more vulnerable
- than ever to opportunistic infections. Cryptosporidiosis may be treated
- symptomatically with tincture of opium, diphenoxylate, or cholestyramine;
- spiramycin, an antibiotic used in Canada and Europe, but not yet approved in
- the United States, appears to resolve or diminish diarrhea associated with
- cryptosporidiosis. (See below for manufacturer of spiramycin.) A
- combination of quinine and clindamycin has also been reported effective.
-
- Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia is more difficult to treat. At present,
- trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole co-trimoxazole, Dapsone and pentamidine are the
- three drugs known to be effective. Pentamidine isethionate (Pentam 300), an
- orphan drug, is commercially available in the United States. For further
- information on this drug, contact: LyphoMed, Inc., 2020 Ruby Street, Melrose
- Park, IL 60610.
-
- However, researchers have recently published scientific information
- indicating that about one-third of AIDS patients who were treated with
- pentamidine were likely to develop a serious form of chronic low blood sugar
- (hypoglycemia). When using pentamidine to treat Pneumocystis Carinii in AIDS
- patients, physicians are advised to check glucose levels daily and creatinine
- every other day during and after (for several days) pentamidine therapy. The
- drug should be given in a hospital setting where patients can be carefully
- monitored.
-
- No treatment has been found for some kinds of AIDS related infections.
- These include Mycobacterium avium intracellulare, cytomegalovirus, and
- Epstein-Barr virus.
-
- Kaposi's sarcoma, as well as other neoplasms occurring in AIDS, respond
- to chemotherapy. Drugs have included vinblastine, etoposide, doxorubicine,
- bleomycin, and combinations of these. Interferon in high doses, which does
- not seem to be useful in treating the underlying disorder or opportunistic
- infections, does appear to be effective in treating Kaposi's sarcoma. Also
- reportedly effective in this cancer is vincristine; this drug has antitumor
- activity without causing further immunosuppression due to bone marrow
- suppression.
-
- The National Institutes of Health are supporting studies to determine the
- effectiveness of suramin, a drug usually used as an antiparasitic, in
- inhibiting the virus' replication and capacity to damage immune cells.
- Treatment with interleukin II to promote T-lymphocyte growth, and with
- various types of interferon, an antiviral protein, have not been effective;
- nor has treatment with acyclovir, vidarabine, various other drugs, white cell
- transfusions, thymic factors, and thymus and bone marrow transplants.
-
- Among the precautions against contracting or spreading AIDS recommended
- by the Public Health Service are the following:
-
- 1) Sexual contact with persons known or suspected to have AIDS should be
- avoided. Multiple sex partners increase the probability of developing the
- disease.
- 2) No members of high risk groups should donate blood or blood products.
- 3) Blood transfusions should only be performed when absolutely necessary.
- 4) Screening procedures for plasma or blood likely to transmit AIDS have
- been developed, and safer blood products for hemophilia patients.
- 5) Health care personnel, laboratory workers, and others in frequent
- contact with AIDS patients should take great care to avoid wounds from
- contaminated needles and similar sharp objects, and contact with blood soiled
- materials.
-
- A new drug for the treatment of Candidiasis, Crytococcal Meningitis, and
- other persons with weakened immune systems such as AIDS patients has recently
- been approved by the FDA. The drug, diflucan (fluconazole), has been found
- effective against these types of infections in persons with depressed immune
- systems.
-
- The Food and Drug Administration has approved the antiviral drug
- didanosine (DDI) for treatment of adults and children with advanced AIDS who
- cannot tolerate or are not helped by AZT. DDI can cause pancreatitis in
- patients with AIDS. Pancreatitis is a potentially fatal inflammation of the
- pancreas. Patients taking DDI should avoid alcoholic beverages and seek
- medical help immediately if they have abdominal pain, nausea, or vomiting.
- As of March 13, 1990, of the 8,300 AIDS patients taking DDI, 78 developed
- pancreatitis and seven of them died.
-