HIV and COVID-19 Coinfection: A Synergism That Results in More Severe Forms of Reactive Arthritis

2021 
Reactive arthritis is defined as arthritis that arises after infection, where pathogens cannot grow in the affected joints. Although the human immunodeficiency virus and severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 are not among the most commonly implicated pathogens, there is growing evidence that they have major implications in the genesis of reactive arthritis. However, there are no described cases of coinfection of both entities that cause reactive arthritis at the same time, and the alterations involved in the immune system that could cause the change of certain clinical characteristics to more severe forms of the disease are unknown. The following describes the case of a male patient in his third decade of life who has an unusual and severe presentation of reactive arthritis associated with coinfection by COVID-19 and the human immunodeficiency virus.
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