| Literature DB >> 12015869 |
Luis Gaitán-Cepeda1, Miguel Cashat-Cruz, Jose Juan Morales-Aguirre, Luis Sánchez-Vargas, Sandra Aquino-Garcia, Rodolfo Fragoso-Ríos, Vicente Cuairán-Ruidiaz, Carlos Avila-Figueroa, Juan Morales, Carlos Avila Figueroa.
Abstract
It has been proposed that HIV-related oral lesions (HIV-ROL) have a significant diagnostic and prognostic value for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection in adult patients. However, in HIV-infected children, the relation between HIV-ROL and immune and virologic status is not well established. The principal objective of this paper is to assess the prevalence of HIV-related oral lesions (HIV-ROL) in Mexican HIV-infected children in relation to their immunologic status, viral load, and gender. Forty-eight HIV-infected children from Immunodeficiency Clinic, Child's Hospital of México, México City, were examined for oral pathology. The data obtained from medical records were: name, gender, age, route of infection, CD4 lymphocytes cells count/mL, HIV-1-RNA level of copies/mL (viral load), and type and time of treatment. The prevalence of HIV-ROL was 29.2%. Oral candidosis was the most prevalent oral lesion (20.8%) followed by periodontal and gingival disease (4.2%), herpes simplex (2.1%), and parotid enlargement (2.1%). There was no association between the prevalence of HIV-ROL and gender, immunological status, or viral load. The most frequent clinical form of oral candidosis was erythematous candidosis (12.5%, N = 6). Our results do not suggest a direct relationship between prevalence of HIV-ROL, severe immunodepression, and/or viral load > 100000 copies in this population.Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 12015869 DOI: 10.1089/10872910252930858
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Patient Care STDS ISSN: 1087-2914 Impact factor: 5.078