Articles: disease.
-
Infection, trauma, and injury result in a stereotypical response that includes loss of food appetite, increased sleepiness, muscle aches, and fever. For thousands of years fever was considered a protective response, and fevers were induced by physicians to combat certain infections. But with the advent of antipyretic drugs, physicians started to reduce fevers, and fever therapy was virtually abandoned. ⋯ However, data indicate that not all fevers are protective and that high fevers are maladaptive. These issues are discussed in the context of the evolution of host defense responses versus modern medical technology. In short, we speculate that patients who would not have survived severe sepsis in the past are now being kept alive and that the occasionally high fevers seen in these patients may be maladaptive.
-
Women who rely on long-term hormonal contraception may neglect to use condoms, and thus increase their risk of contracting sexually transmitted diseases, including AIDS. ⋯ Although condom use among all women declined markedly once they initiated long-term hormonal contraception, frequency of condom use varied by subgroup and was associated with several factors. Most importantly, women with more than one sexual partner and those who received a message during counseling on the need to continue using condoms were more likely than others to use condoms in conjunction with the implant or injectable.
-
J. Acquir. Immune Defic. Syndr. Hum. Retrovirol. · Sep 1998
Determinants of progression of HIV infection in a Greek hemophilia cohort followed for up to 16 years after seroconversion.
Our objectives are to describe the progression of HIV disease and to assess the influence of hemophilia-related variables, age at infection, and antibodies to cytomegalovirus infection (anti-CMV) in a Greek cohort of 158 HIV-1-positive hemophilic men, who received prospective follow-up for up to 16 years after infection. A total of 79 patients had died, representing a cumulative progression rate of 72.4% (95% confidence interval [CI], 56.6-83.3). A significant proportion of the mortality (30%) resulted from conditions not formally related to AIDS, with liver failure and cerebral hemorrhage predominant. ⋯ Appropriate modeling showed a nonlinear age effect, with a steeper increase of relative hazard for patients >40 years of age at seroconversion. The age effect remained significant even after controlling for current CD4 cell count. Further investigation is required to elucidate the mechanisms of the age effect and the contribution of HCV coinfection on the disease progression.