Background: The World Health Organisation has estimated that 25 million people have died of HIV/AIDS, including 2 million people who died in 2007. A significant proportion of these deaths were due to opportunistic pneumonias. The majority of new HIV infections are in adults aged 20 to 39 years old. Individuals with HIV infection are at increased risk for tuberculosis (TB) and other respiratory tract infections (RTIs). The altered CD4 T-cell homeostasis induced by HIV infection may play a key role in the development of respiratory tract infections in HIV-infected patients.
Aim: The aim of the study is to find out of mean CD4 count of HIV
patients at which they were at higher risk of developing various RTIs and
accordingly when HAART is to be started in this part of the world.
Materials and Methods: The present prospective study was conducted
between 9th August 2009 to 23rd January 2012. All the 961 HIV-infected patients
and 300 HIV seronegative patients’ three early morning sputum were screened for
routine bacterial and fungal pathogens and even examined for AFB and few of the
samples were even cultured on LJ medium. All sputum samples’ smears were also
examined for Poly Morpho Nuclear Leucocytes (PMNLs) in Gram staining.
Results: Out of all these 961 HIV patients, those with probable
viral respiratory tract infections (RTIs) (349 patients) had a mean CD4 count
of 474.62 ± 114.89, followed by mixed polymicrobial RTI (80 patients) with mean
CD4 about 392.26 + 87.14. For the patients with pure fungal etiology (66), the
mean CD4 count was found to be 377.29 + 268.29 followed by 466 patients with
pure monomicrobial bacterial RTI the mean CD4 count was about 223.07 + 83.21.
Conclusion: A very vague co-relationship between the pattern of
RTIs and CD4 counts has been attempted. Only Fungal and Bacterial RTIs were
seen first to establish in even HIV-infected patients at very high mean CD4
counts of about 377 + 268.29 and 223.07 + 83.21 respectively, but in both very
high prevalence rates were observed when compared with HIV non-infected
patients with probability values of <0.05 and <0.001 respectively. The
probable viral etiology of RTI was significantly high in HIV-non infected
subjects when compared to HIV-infected RTI patients with a probability value of
P < 0.001.
Author
(s) Details
Rajeev
Ramanlal Shah
Microbiology Department, Shree Aurobindo Medical College and PG
Institute Indore, Madhya Pradesh, India.
Please see the book here:- https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/msti/v7/4269
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