| Literature DB >> 26961262 |
Charles K Hammond1, Alexander Shapson-Coe1, Rajeshree Govender2, Ronald van Toorn3, Alvin Ndondo1, Nicky Wieselthaler4, Brian Eley5, Lawrence Mubaiwa2, Jo M Wilmshurst6.
Abstract
A national multicenter study identified 17 South African children with vertically acquired HIV-1 infection and HIV-associated vasculopathy. Five of the children (all indigenous African ancestry) had progressive vascular disease, consistent with moyamoya syndrome. Median presentation age 5.8 years (range 2.2-11). The children with moyamoya syndrome presented with abnormal CD4 counts and raised viral loads. Clinical features included motor deficits, neuroregression, and intellectual disability. Neuroimaging supported progressive vascular disease with preceding clinically silent disease course. Neurologic recovery occurred in 1 patient with improved CD4 counts. Four of the 5 children presented during the era when access to antiretroviral therapy was limited, suggesting that with improved management of HIV-1, progressive vasculopathy is less prevalent. However the insidious disease course illustrated indicates that the syndrome can progress "silently," and manifest with misleading phenotypes such as cognitive delay or regression. Sub-Saharan Africa has limited access to neuroimaging and affected children may be underdiagnosed.Entities:
Keywords: Africa; HIV infection; HIV vasculopathy; cerebrovascular disease; children; moyamoya syndrome
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26961262 DOI: 10.1177/0883073816635747
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Child Neurol ISSN: 0883-0738 Impact factor: 1.987