HIV Infection May Cause Neurological Damage Regardless of Antiretroviral Therapy Effectiveness, Study Says
HIV infection may cause damage to the brain even if the virus is suppressed to nearly undetectable levels with antiretroviral therapy, according to a study published in the Nov. 14 issue of the journal NeuroReport, the San Francisco Chronicle reports. Researchers from the University of California-San Francisco departments of psychiatry and radiology at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center conducted a battery of tests on 31 HIV-positive patients and 35 HIV-negative patients to gauge neurological damage (Russell, San Francisco Chronicle, 11/14). The researchers used neuropsychological tests and magnetic resonance imaging to test the patients' brain structure and functions (Chao et al., NeuroReport, 11/14). The researchers also tested patients' contingent negative variation amplitude -- a measure of a person's overall ability to react to something by taking physical action. Among the HIV-positive patients, both the participants who were taking antiretroviral drugs and the participants who were not taking antiretrovirals showed poor results, suggesting that they may have damage in the basal ganglia part of the brain. In addition, MRI scans showed that HIV-positive participants -- regardless of their therapy regimen -- had possible damage in the thalamus area of the brain (BBC News, 11/17). The problem of AIDS-related dementia, which once affected one in five AIDS patients, was thought to have been largely solved with the advent of antiretroviral drugs (San Francisco Chronicle, 11/14). "You see people on [antiretroviral] medications and they seem fine," Dr. Linda Chao, lead author of the study, said, adding, "But the take-home message is that antiviral medications might not be stopping brain damage. When we put patients' brains under closer scrutiny, we saw that they were affected."
Blood-Brain Barrier
Many antiretroviral drugs are ineffective at lowering viral levels in the brain because they cannot get past the blood-brain barrier, a filter designed to protect the brain from large, potentially dangerous molecules, according to BBC News. Theoretically, people on antiretroviral therapy may have higher levels of HIV in the brain than in the rest of the body even though they may have nearly undetectable viral levels in the rest of the body (BBC News, 11/17). However, the level of neurological damage detected in patients on antiretroviral therapy is so low that it requires sophisticated equipment and tests to detect, Dr. Michael Weiner, director of the MRI unit at the VA medical center and a lead investigator in the study, said, adding, "Patients do not appear to be clinically affected." However, Weiner said that further study is needed because it is unknown whether the abnormalities detected were caused by HIV or by the antiretroviral drugs, according to the Chronicle (San Francisco Chronicle, 11/14).