• Medicina · Feb 2022

    Analysis of Deaths among HIV-Infected Patients Hospitalized in 2009-2018 in Main Centre of Infectious Disease in Region of Lower Silesia in Poland, Detailing Lesions in the Central Nervous System.

    • Justyna Janocha-Litwin, Aleksander Zińczuk, Sylwia Serafińska, Anna Szymanek-Pasternak, and Krzysztof Simon.
    • Department of Infectious Diseases and Hepatology, Medical University Wroclaw, 50-367 Wroclaw, Poland.
    • Medicina (Kaunas). 2022 Feb 11; 58 (2).

    AbstractBackground and Objectives: Patients living with HIV (PLWH), especially those diagnosed too late or not receiving treatment with antiretroviral drugs in the stage of advanced immunodeficiency AIDS for various reasons, develop additional opportunistic infections or AIDS-defining diseases that may contribute directly to the death of these patients. Material and Methods: In this work, we focused on disorders of the central nervous system (CNS) by retrospectively analyzing the symptoms, clinical and autopsy diagnoses of patients diagnosed with HIV infection who died in the provincial specialist hospital in the Lower Silesia region in Poland. Results: The autopsy was performed in 27.4% cases. The cause of death was determined to be HIV-related/AIDS-associated in 78% patients. The most common AIDS-defining CNS diseases in our cohort were toxoplasmosis and cryptococcosis. Conslusions: The presented results of the most common causes of changes in the central nervous system among deceased HIV-infected patients are comparable to the results of studies by other scientists cited in the publication.

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