Aids - neurological complications: Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 17:09, 18 March 2025

HIV / AIDS is primarily an immune system disorder caused by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), that can also affect the nervous system.

Mechanism

HIV does not appear to directly invade nerve cells but it jeopardizes their health and function.

Symptoms

Some of the symptoms and effects of HIV / AIDS on neurological system include: confusion, forgetfulness, behavioral changes, headaches, progressive weakness and loss of sensation in the arms and legs, cognitive motor impairment, or damage to the peripheral nerves.

Other complications

Other complications that can occur as a result of HIV infection or the drugs used to treat it include pain, seizures, shingles, spinal cord problems, lack of coordination, difficult or painful swallowing, anxiety disorder, depression, fever, vision loss, gait disorders, destruction of brain tissue, and coma.

AIDS dementia and encephalitis

Other AIDS-related nervous system disorders may be caused by certain cancers or by illnesses that would not otherwise affect people with healthy immune systems.

Most common complications

Among the most common neurological complications are: AIDS dementia complex, causing symptoms such as encephalitis (inflammation of the brain), behavioral changes, and a gradual decline in cognitive function; central nervous system lymphomas, cancerous tumors that either begin in the brain or result from a cancer that has spread from another site in the body; cryptococcal meningitis; cytomegalovirus infections; herpes virus infections; neuropathy; neurosyphilis; progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML); and psychological and neuropsychiatric disorders.

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