A Study of Neuropathy in HIV Infection

1992 
A prospective study of possible aetiological factors for neuropathy associated with HIV infection was performed in 80 patients and 28 homosexual controls. At entry to the study twelve patients (15 per cent) had evidence of a generalized neuropathy not due to any other cause and a further three patients developed symptomatic neuropathy during a mean (SD) follow-up of 20 (7.5) months. All but two of these neuropathies were of the distal symmetrical sensory type. Electrophysiology was consistent with an axonal pathology and nerve biopsy confirmed this as the major pathological change. Warming threshold was the diagnostic test most frequently abnormal, sometimes in the absence of other electrophysiological abnormalities. No association was seen with opportunistic infection (cytomegalovirus, herpes simplex, Pneumocystis pneumonia, toxoplasmosis, Cryptococcus infection or tuberculosis). HIV proviral DNA could not be detected in paraffin sections of peripheral nerve in six patients with neuropathy. The presence of the neuropathy did not show significant correlation with depression of the number of CD4+T cells in the blood, impaired T cell function tests, or IgG, IgM, or IgA levels. Immune complexes containingC1q, but not those containing IgG, IgM, IgA or C3c, were significantly more common among neuropathic patients (ρ =0.01).
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