Literature DB >> 16868439

Neurocognitive functioning and HAART in HIV and hepatitis C virus co-infection.

Thomas D Parsons1, Karen A Tucker, Colin D Hall, Wendy T Robertson, Joseph J Eron, Michael W Fried, Kevin R Robertson.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: This study examined the effects of HAART on neurocognitive functioning in persons with hepatitis C virus (HCV) and HIV co-infection.
DESIGN: A prospective study examining neurocognitive performance before and after HAART initiation.
METHOD: Participant groups included a mono-infected group (45 HIV+/HCV- participants) and a co-infected group (20 HIV+/HCV+ participants). A neuropsychological battery (attention/concentration, psychomotor speed, executive functioning, verbal memory, visual memory, fine motor, and gross motor functioning) was used to evaluate all participants. After 6 months of HAART, 31 HIV+ mono-infected and 13 HCV+/HIV+ co-infected participants were reevaluated.
RESULTS: Neurocognitive functioning by domain revealed significantly worse performance in the co-infected group when compared to the monoinfected group on domains of visual memory and fine motor functioning. Assessment of neurocognitive functioning after antiretroviral therapy revealed that the co-infected group was no longer performing worse than the monoinfected group.
CONCLUSIONS: The findings of the current study suggest that persons with HCV+/HIV+ co-infection may have greater neurocognitive declines than persons with HIV infection alone. HCV+/HIV+ co-infection may accelerate the progression of HIV related neurocognitive decline.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2006        PMID: 16868439     DOI: 10.1097/01.aids.0000238404.16121.47

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AIDS        ISSN: 0269-9370            Impact factor:   4.177


  21 in total

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8.  Neurocognitive impairment is worse in HIV/HCV-coinfected individuals with liver dysfunction.

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9.  The impact of human immune deficiency virus and hepatitis C coinfection on white matter microstructural integrity.

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10.  Effects of active HCV replication on neurologic status in HIV RNA virally suppressed patients.

Authors:  D B Clifford; M Smurzynski; L S Park; T-M Yeh; Y Zhao; L Blair; M Arens; S R Evans
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