| Literature DB >> 20537129 |
Noeline Nakasujja1, Richard L Skolasky, Seggane Musisi, Peter Allebeck, Kevin Robertson, Allan Ronald, Elly Katabira, David B Clifford, Ned Sacktor.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Among patients with HIV infection, depression is the most frequently observed psychiatric disorder. The presence of depressive symptoms and cognitive dysfunction among HIV patients has not been well studied in Sub-Saharan Africa. Initiation of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) may have an effect on the prevalence and the change over time of depression symptoms and cognitive impairment among HIV-positive individuals.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20537129 PMCID: PMC2901316 DOI: 10.1186/1471-244X-10-44
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Demographic and Clinical Characteristics of the HIV-positive and HIV-negative individuals.
| Characteristic | HIV Positive N = 102 | HIV Negative N = 25 | p-value1 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age, years (mean, SD) | 34.2 (6.23) | 30.3 (3.99) | .004 |
| Female, n (%) | 74 (72.6%) | 10 (40.0%) | .004 |
| Education, years (mean, SD) | 9.1 (4.3) | 10.4 (4.2) | .207 |
| CD4 cell count (mean, SD) | 130 (69.5) | N/A | .654 |
| Plasma HIV RNA, log-10 copies/mL (mean, SD) | 4.9 (0.87) | N/A | .672 |
| CES-D score (mean, SD) | 18.1 (11.4) | 9.1 (9.0) | < .001 |
| Karnofsky Score | 84 (8.5) | 98 (4.1) | 0.001 |
| Baseline (HIV+ = 102 HIV- = 25) | 55 (53.9%) | 7 (28.0%) | .021 |
| 3-month (HIV+ = 95 HIV- = 23) | 34 (36.0%) | 3 (13.0%) | .008 |
| 6-month (HIV+ = 93 HIV- = 21) | 28 (30.0%) | 5 (24.0%) | .206 |
| 9.44 (1.8) | 11.10 (0.8) | < .001 | |
| Baseline -do- | 70 (68.6%) | 4 (16.0%) | < .0012 |
| 3-month -do- | 34 (35.8%) | 5 (21.7%) | |
| 6-month -do- | 28 (30.1%) | 9 (42.8%) | |
| Baseline -do- | 40 (39.2%) | 1 (4.0%) | .0132 |
| 3-month -do- | 34 (35.8%) | 1 (4.0%) | |
| 6-month -do- | 28 (30.1%) | 2 (9.5%) | |
1Differences between HIV-positive and HIV-negative individuals were made using Student t-test (continuous measures) or Fisher's exact test (binary measures) unless otherwise noted.
2Differences in prevalence measures were assessed using logistic regression, adjusting for age and gender.
Figure 1Mean CES-D scores among HIV-negative and HIV-positive individuals. The depressive symptoms measured with CES-D show a decline in the average score over the study period. This decline in symptoms was significant in the HIV-positive individuals p = 0.003 but not among the HIV-negative individuals p = 0.434.