Cardiac & Renal Disease in HIV Patients And Their Correlation With CD4 Count

Cardiac & Renal Disease in HIV Patients

Authors

  • Isha sood
  • Gaurav Kasundra

Keywords:

ART-Anti Retroviral Therapy, Cardiovascular, CD4, Human Immunodeficiency Virus –HIV, Renal

Abstract

Objectives: The introduction of Anti retroviral therapy (ART) for HIV disease has significantly modified the quality of life and lengthened survival of HIV infected patients. Cardiac and renal disease may be direct consequence of HIV infection, due to opportunistic infection or related to drug toxicity. Aim of our study is to determine prevalence of the cardiovascular and renal manifestations in HIV infected patients and their correlation to CD4 count. Methods: A cross sectional study was carried out over a period of 2 years at Shri Sayajirao General Hospital and Medical College Baroda. 200 consecutive HIV patients attending medical outpatient department and those admitted were screened using ECG, 2-D Echocardiography, urinary albumin, serum creatinine, serum cholesterol and sonography kidneys. CD4 count was done in all patients. Patients with echocardiography evidence of ischemic heart disease, left ventricular dysfunction, decreased ejection fraction, pericardial effusion and pulmonary hypertension were included in cardiac group. All patients with urinary albumin more than 3 gram, normal or enlarged kidney on ultrasound with or without raised creatinine were included under HIV associated nephropathy group. Renal biopsy was done in one such patient to establish the diagnosis. Results and Interpretation: Of total 200 patients screened, 20 patients had cardiac disease (10%), 22 renal disease (11%) while 2 had both. On further analysis in cardiac group, dilated cardiomyopathy (45%) was the most common. Similarly, among those with renal disease, HIV associated nephropathy (31.8%) was the most common. CD4 count showed that 27(67.5%) of 40 patients had CD4 count below 100.

References

1. UNAIDS reports on global AIDS epidemic year 2008
2. D'Agati V and Appel GB. HIV infection and the kidney. J Am Soc Nephrol. 1997; 8: 138-152.
3. Winston JA, Burns GC and Klotman PE. The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) epidemsic and HIV-associated nephropathy. Semin Nephrol. 1998; 18: 373-377.
4. Barbaro G. Cardiovascular Manifestations of HIV Infection. Circulation. 2002; 106: 1420-1425.
5. Pairoj R, Nattawut W. Cardiac manifestations of AIDS. Arch Intern Med. 2000; 160: 602-608.
6. Chioma PE, Fatiu A, Abubaker S, Kayode A, Friday W, Adewale A. Renal disease in HIV-seropositive patients in Nigeria: an assessment of prevalence, clinical features and risk. Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation. 2008; 23: 741-746.
7. Steel-Duncan J, Miller M, Pierre RB et al. Renal manifestations in HIV-infected Jamaican children. West Indian Med J. 2008; 57: 246-252.
8. Fernando SK, Finkelstein FO, Moore BA, Weissman S. Prevalence of chronic kidney disease in an urban HIV infected population. Am J Med Sci. 2008; 335: 89-94. 9. Himelman RB, Chung WS, Chernoff DN, Schiller NB, Hollander H. Cardiac Manifestations of HIV infection: a two dimensional echocardiographic study. J Am Coll Cardiol. 1989; 13: 1030-1036.
10. Corallo S, Mutinelli MR, Moroni M et al. Echocardiography detects myocardial damage in AIDS. Eur Heart J. 1988; 9: 887-892.
11. Hakim JG, Matenga JA, Siziya S. Myocardial dysfunction in HIV infection: An echocardiographic study of 157 patients in hospital in Zimbabwe. Heart. 1996; 76: 161-165.
12. Aggarwal P, Sharma A, Bhardwaj R, Raina R. Cardiac Manifestations of HIV infection: a two dimensional echocardiograph. JAPI. 2009; 57: 745-746.

Downloads

Published

2014-02-28

How to Cite

sood, I., & Kasundra, G. (2014). Cardiac & Renal Disease in HIV Patients And Their Correlation With CD4 Count: Cardiac & Renal Disease in HIV Patients. National Journal of Integrated Research in Medicine, 5(1), 49–52. Retrieved from http://nicpd.ac.in/ojs-/index.php/njirm/article/view/2277

Issue

Section

Original Articles