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Published byValerie James Modified over 9 years ago
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HIV D S O’Briain March 2007
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Pathology of HIV Epidemic disease Influenza pandemic 1918-9 Legionnaire’s disease 1976 HIV 1981 Heroin, Dublin 2000 SARS 2003
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AIDS to end of the 1980s
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Pathology of HIV Epidemiology Modern Plague, 40 million infected by 2000 Sub-Saharan Africa (high) East and South East Asia (moderate) Europe, USA (‘low’)
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Pathology of HIV Lymphadenopathy 1980 Cluster of cases, New York, San Francisco 1981 Delineation of risk groups: homosexual, haemophiliacs: blood products/blood, IVDU Later: mother to child, heterosexual, unknown HCW
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Pathology of HIV HIV 1 and 2: retrovirus attach to CD4 receptor Acute seroconversion: 50%; mono-like illness Latent period 2-10 years+ –Persistent generalised lymphadenopathy AIDS relatated complex ARC (diarrhoea, sweats, oral candida, lymphadenopathy, weight loss) CD4 500-200/uL vs viral load Neural disease: meningitis, encephalomyelopathy at seroconversion: meningitis, encephalopathy, dementia later Opportunistic infections Malignancy
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Pathology of HIV Infections (decreased CD4 cells, HAART) Candida: (mouth, oesophagus) Pneumocystis Carinii (pneumonia) Tuberculosis (early), atypical mycobacterial infections (late) CMV (eye, GI) or Herpes Simplex Cerebral toxoplasmosis Parasitic infections of GI Systemic fungal infection Bacterial infection
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Pathology of HIV Kaposi Sarcoma Before AIDS: a rare lesion in elderly Jewish or mediterranean patients, transplant recipients, young Africans (Lake Victoria) AIDS: male homosexuals, venereally transmitted Skin lesion, also GI, lung, other sites Morphology: vascular granulation tissue-like Human Herpes virus 8
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Pathology of HIV Neoplasia Kaposi Sarcoma (HHV 8) Lymphoma (EBV), B cell, aggressive –Brain, Extranodal sites, Nodal, body cavity –Other lymphoma, Hodgkin, T cell Cervix (HPV)
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