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Primary neurological manifestations of HIV in children

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J INFECTION DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DOI: 10.3855/jidc.17645

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HIV; neurological; children; peripheral neuropathy; myopathy; spinal cord

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Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) causes a range of diseases and neurological manifestations are common, contributing to morbidity and mortality. Recent evidence shows CNS involvement in HIV from initial viral entry, challenging the previous belief that it only affects the advanced stages of the disease. Neurological disorders in HIV-infected children can share similarities with adults, but there are also unique manifestations. Advances in treatment have led to more HIV-infected children surviving into adulthood, prompting the need to study primary neurologic disorders in this population.
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) causes various diseases in different age groups. Neurological manifestations of HIV are common and add to morbidity and mortality. It was previously thought that the central nervous system (CNS) was involved only in the advanced stages of the disease. However, recent evidence supports pathological involvement of the CNS from initial viral entry. Some of the CNS manifestations in children share similarities to neurologic disorders of HIV-infected adult patients, while others are unique to the pediatric population. Many HIV-related neurologic complications seen in adults are rarely encountered in children with AIDS and vice versa. However, with recent advances in the treatment, more HIV-infected children are surviving into adulthood. A systematic review of the available literature was performed to study the manifestations, causes, outcomes, and treatment of primary neurologic disorders in children with HIV. Online databases (Ovid Medline, Embase and PubMed), websites from the World Health Organization, commercial search engines, including Google, and chapters on HIV in standard textbooks of pediatrics and medicine were reviewed.HIV-associated neurological syndromes can be classified into four types: primary HIV neurological diseases, treatment-related neurological diseases, adverse neurological effects of antiretroviral therapy and secondary/opportunistic neurological illness. These conditions are not mutually exclusive and may co-exist in a given patient. This narrative review will focus mainly on the primary neurological manifestations of HIV in children.

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