HIV/AIDs Flashcards

1
Q

What are the ways HIV can be spread?

A
Sexual transmission
Injection drug misuse
Blood products
Vertical transmission
Organ transplant
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2
Q

Can an unconscious patient be tested for HIV?

A

Yes, if it is in the patients best interests

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3
Q

How can HIV be tested?

A

POC testing (blood)

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4
Q

What cells does HIV infect & destroy in the immune system?

A

CD4 cells

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5
Q

Over the course of the infection, what can be observed?

A

Decrease in CD4 count

Increase viral load

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6
Q

As HIV infection progresses, what are you more susceptible to?

A

Oppurtunistic infection

Tumours

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7
Q

When do most AIDs infections occur?

A

At CD4 count <200

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8
Q

How many different stages of disease are there?

A

4

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9
Q

What are some of the most common opportunistic infections observed in HIV patients?

A
Thrush
PJP
TB
Lymphoma
Cryptococcal meningitis
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10
Q

What is the difference between HIV & AIDs?

A

Asymptomatic - HIV

AIDs = severe infection

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11
Q

What is the timeline of infection observed?

A
Acute infection (seroconversion)
Asymptomatic 
HIV related illnesses
AIDs defining illnesses
Death
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12
Q

What is a seroconversion illness?

A

This is when the HIV antibodies develop (similar to flu-like symptoms)
Typical of acute HIV infection

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13
Q

What are some of the symptoms of seroconversion?

A
Flu-like illness
Fever
Malaise &amp; lethargy
Pharyngitis
Lymphadenopathy
Toxic exanthema
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14
Q

What infection is associated with late stage AIDS infection?

A

PJP (Pneumocystis pneumonia)

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15
Q

What investigations would you do in suspected PJP?

A

CXR

Sputum or bronchoscopy (PCR)

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16
Q

What is the treatment for PJP?

A

Cotrimoxazole

Pentamidine

17
Q

What are the classes of antiviral drugs available?

A

AZT, DDI, DDC, 3TC, D4T

18
Q

What is antiretroviral therapy?

A

Combination antiretorviral therapy (cART) means at least 3 drugs from 2 groups

Acts at different stages of lifecycle

19
Q

Where do antiviral treatments work?

A

Reverse transcriptase inhibitors
Integrase inhibitor
Protease inhibitor

20
Q

When do patients start treatment?

A

At point of diagnosis

21
Q

In pregnancy, when should antivirals be taken?

A

Before 3rd trimester

22
Q

What can be done to assess the sensitivity of drugs to HIV infection?

A

Resistance testing

23
Q

What are some of the causes of incomplete suppression of viral load?

A

Inadequate potency
Inadequate drug levels
Inadequate adherence
Pre-exisiting resistance

24
Q

What are some of the side effects of nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors?

A

Neuropathy

Lipodystrophy

25
Q

What are some of the side effects of protease inhibitors?

A

diarrhoea
lipodystrophy
hyperlipidaemia

26
Q

What are some of the side effects of integrase inhibitors?

A

Rashes

Disrupted sleep

27
Q

What are some of the mechanisms of HIV prevention?

A

Behaviour change/ condoms
Treatment as prevention (low VL = untransmissable)
PrEP
PEPSE