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[Cerebellar degeneration associated with HIV infection]. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluates the occurrence of cerebellar degeneration in patients with progressive cerebellar ataxia who are also HIV-positive.
  • Five out of 377 patients (1.3%) were found to have both HIV and cerebellar ataxia, with an average HIV infection duration of 5 years and ataxia lasting 1 year.
  • Despite receiving antiretroviral therapy, these patients experienced progressive ataxia, indicating that HIV can lead to cerebellar degeneration even in stable remission.

Article Abstract

Objective: To describe the features of the clinical presentation and evaluate the incidence of HIV-associated cerebellar degeneration in patients with progressive cerebellar ataxia.

Material And Methods: Three hundred and seventy-seven patients with progressive cerebellar ataxia were studied. Brain MRI study, assessment by the Scale for the Assessment and Rating of Ataxia (SARA), screening for cognitive impairment by the Montreal Cognitive Assessment Scale (MoCA) were performed. In patients with HIV infection, autoimmune, deficient and other causes of ataxia, as well as opportunistic infections, multiple system atrophy and frequent forms of hereditary spinocerebellar ataxias were excluded.

Results: Five patients (1.3%) were identified with a combination of cerebellar ataxia and HIV infection (2 men, 3 women, aged 31 to 52 years). The median duration of HIV infection was 5 years, the duration of ataxia was 1 year. In the clinical findings, in addition to progressive ataxia, pyramidal signs, dysphagia, less often ophthalmoparesis, dystonia, postural hand tremor, affective and mild cognitive impairment were observed. In three patients, brain MRI revealed signs of olivopontocerebellar atrophy, two patients had isolated cerebellar degeneration (mainly of the vermis). All patients received combination of antiretroviral therapy in various regimens, but despite this, ataxia was progressive.

Conclusion: HIV infection is a rare cause of cerebellar degeneration. This diagnosis remains a diagnosis of exclusion to this day. Cerebellar degeneration can occur and progress even after achieving a stable remission of HIV infection while taking highly active antiretroviral therapy.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.17116/jnevro2023123051123DOI Listing

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