elmhurst oraquick advance HIV 1/2 rapid test.
5 microliters blood or plasma or swab teeth/gums both upper and lower one time around (but not cheeks) push until hit bottom of vial
takes 20 minutes
if you use the loop, stir around in the vial
solution should appear pink
if from blod tube, can use lavendar (edta), green (sodium heparin), or sodium citrate (Light blue)
Elisa to elisa to western blot
New rapid test with 20 min turnaround: OraQuick Rapid HIV by Abbott uses fingerstick blood.
MAI-gi c/o, biaxin, ribabutin, ethabutol. Zithromax for prophylaxis
PCP-non-productive cough. Prednisone 40 BID if PaO2<70 or Aa>35
Encephalitis-toxo, crypto (indolent course, do LP with pressures after CT on HIV CD4<200 c headache), HSV, lymphoma, PML
Esophagitis-candida, HSV, CMV
Acute HIV Presentation
Fever/Fatigue/Rash/Oral Ulcerations/Lymphadenopathy looks like mono
A CD4
count less than 200/mm3 leads to more advanced disease. It is
important to identify patients in this category, because they are at much higher
risk of opportunistic infections, including Pneumocystis carinii
pneumonia (PCP), tuberculosis (TB), toxoplasmosis, cryptosporidiosis,
isosporiasis, esophageal candidiasis, cryptococcosis, and histoplasmosis.
Disseminated Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) or cytomegalovirus (CMV)
infection tend to occur in patients with CD4 counts of less than 50/mm3
HIV infection is a known risk factor for neuroleptic malignant syndrome and should be considered in any seropositive patient who takes an implicated antipsychotic medication, especially if they present with fever and some combination of cogwheeling, diaphoresis, disorientation, or rigidity.36 The antiretroviral drug abacavir (Ziagen) can cause a hypersensitivity reaction characterized by malaise, fever, and nausea, with or without vomiting. In such cases, the drug must be stopped and never restarted as fatal reactions may occur.
ALC = total white blood cell count X lymphocyte
percentage
An ALC
less than 1000 cells/mm3 was 91% predictive in identifying
patients with CD4 counts less than 200 cells/mm3
(sensitivity only 67%, but specificity 96%), while an ALC greater than 2000
cells/mm3 was 95% predictive in identifying CD4
counts greater than 200 cells/mm3
(Ann Emerg Med 1998 32(3 Pt 1))
Prophylactic therapy with trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX) or dapsone does not rule out PCP infection, as about one-fifth of compliant patients will suffer breakthrough infections. Nearly one-third of those using aerosolized pentamidine will also develop disease (NEJM 332(11))
About 35% of those with TB had no infiltrate, while 12% had a normal chest x-ray. (NEJM 340:5)
Although radiographic findings of many pulmonary complications may be nondiagnostic, certain patterns may be suggestive of specific disorders. A focal infiltrate on plain chest radiography suggests bacterial pneumonia. A diffuse infiltrative process on chest radiography, especially in the absence of leukocytosis, is associated with PCP. PCP is suggested by increased serum LDH and hypoxia, which may be more severe than expected from radiographic findings. Hilar adenopathy with diffuse pulmonary infiltrates suggests cryptococcus, histoplasmosis, mycobacterial infection, or neoplasm. KS can exhibit cough, fever, and dyspnea, and the chest radiograph may mimic that seen with PCP.
non-productive cough, exertional dyspnea, weight loss. LDH>220. Give steroids if PO2 less than 70 or Aa>35 (Prednisone 40 mg PO BID).
3 Amps Bactrim Q 6 or Trimeth plus Dapsone or Pentamidine or Atovaquone or Clinda + Primaquine
Oral 2DS Tabs TID
Prone to pneumothorax
non-productive cough, exertional dyspnea, weight loss. LDH>220. Give steroids if PO2 less than 70 or Aa>35 (Prednisone 40 mg PO BID). 3 Amps Bactim Q 6.
Prone to pneumothorax
93 PCP cases: 63% had elevated LDH, hypoxemia in 57%, C-XR normal in 39%, interstitial 36%, and acinar infiltrates in 25%. (J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr 1994;7(1):39-45)
CMV
retinitis occurs in 10% to 30% of HIV-infected patients, and is the most common
cause of blindness in AIDS patients. With advances in HAART, reduced incidences
of CMV retinitis have been observed, but discontinuation of HAART may result in
intraocular inflammation.[i]
CMV retinitis typically produces severe necrotic vasculitis and retinitis. When
present, it may be asymptomatic or may present as change in visual acuity,
photophobia, scotoma, redness, or pain. It is diagnosed by its characteristic
appearance on indirect ophthalmoscopy of fluffy white retinal lesions, often
perivascular. Differential diagnosis includes toxoplasmosis, syphilis, HSV
infection, VZV infection, and tuberculosis
Any HIV patient presenting with neuro complaints gets CT then an LP
Consider CT + and – or MRI c gadolinium
Serum vdrl, toxo serology, and crypto antigen
With LP, get VDRL, Crypto Antigen, Opening Pressures, TB, Use PCR if available for toxo, cmv, and EBV
Cryptococcus
May present as focal cerebral lesions of diffuse meningoencephalitis
The
most common presenting symptoms are fever and headache, often accompanied by
nausea and vomiting. Less common are
visual changes, dizziness, seizures and cranial nerve deficits. The diagnosis depends on identifying
organisms in CSF. Cryptococcal
antigen in the CSF is nearly 100% sensitive and specific; less definitive are
India ink staining (60-80%
sensitive), fungal culture (95% sensitive) or serum cryptococcal antigen (95%
sensitive). Treatment of cryptococcal meningitis
requires admission for IV amphotericin B (0.7 mg/kg/day); flucytosine (100
mg/kg/day) may be added to this regimen. A response can be expected
approximately 60% of the time.
Toxoplasmosis
Toxoplasmosis tends to have a greater number of lesions with a predilection for the basal ganglia and corticomedullary area, versus lymphomas which are more often singular lesions located in the periventricular matter or corpus callosum. Tuberculosis is characterized by an inflammatory appearance on CT, with a thick isodense exudate filling the basal cisterns. Patients with suspected toxoplasmosis should be admitted and treated with pyrimethamine (100-200 mg po loading dose, followed by 50-100 mg po/day), plus sulfadiazine (4-8 gm po/day) with folinic acid (10 mg po/day) to reduce the incidence of pancytopenia. Short courses of high-dose steroids are beneficial in cases where significant edema or mass effect is noted; seizure prophylaxis with phenytoin, may also be used in these cases.
Patients with esophagitis usually complain of pain and difficulty swallowing. Candida albicans is most often responsible for esophagitis in AIDS patients, causing about 60%-75% of cases.119 Other etiologies include CMV and herpes simplex virus. The antiretroviral drug ddC can produce esophageal ulcers, and some patients with HIV have idiopathic esophageal ulcers that respond to steroids.120 Those using topical solutions for oral candidiasis, such as clotrimazole troches or nystatin suspensions, may not have visible evidence of oral or pharyngeal thrush but still have esophageal disease; topical solutions are effective for oral candidiasis but not for esophageal infection.
Diarrhea
Diarrhea is the most common gastrointestinal complaint in AIDS patients and is
estimated to occur in 50% to 90%. Diarrhea can vary in severity from a few loose
stools per day to massive fluid loss with prostration, fever, chills, and weight
loss. Potential pathogens include parasites (Cryptosporidium
parvum, Enterocytozoon bieneusi, Isospora belli, Giardia lamblia, Entameba
histolytica, Microsporidia, Cyclospora, and others), bacteria (Salmonella, Shigella, Campylobacter,
Helicobacter pylori, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Mycobacterium avium complex,
Clostridium difficile, and others), viruses (cytomegalovirus, herpes
simplex, HIV, and others), and fungi (Histoplasma
capsulatum, cryptococcus neoformans, coccidiodes imitis, and others).
Significant gastrointestinal bleeding and dehydration have been associated with
many pathogens, particularly CMV.
Salmonella infection can be of particular concern in HIV-infected patients,
often producing recurrent bacteremia and other significant clinical disease.
Neoplastic GI involvement with KS or lymphoma may produce dysphagia,
obstruction, intussusception, or diarrhea.
Cryptosporidium and Isospora
infections are commonly associated with HIV infection, and both organisms may
produce prolonged watery diarrhea.[ii]112-113
Diagnosis may be sought using acid-fast staining of stool samples, or by
monoclonal antibody, or enzyme-linked immunoabsorbent assays. Treatment of these disorders is
clinically variably successful.
Symptoms may be treated with diet modification or loperamide.
Cryptosporidium infections may
be treated with some success with paromomycin (500 to 750 mg,
ED management should include repletion of fluid and electrolytes and obtaining
of appropriate diagnostic studies. These may include microscopic examination of
stool for leukocytes and of stool samples for bacterial culture, acid-fast
stain, ova, and parasites. If indicated, outpatient anoscopy, proctoscopy, or
sigmoidoscopy (with or without biopsy) may be arranged for patients who require
further evaluation but do not require immediate admission. Management of symptoms of severe diarrhea
not requiring specific therapy may include attapulgite (Kaopectate), psyllium
(Metamucil), diet modification, or diphenoxylate hydrochloride with atropine (Lomotil).
Scabies
treat with 5% permethrin, single application
better
yet Ivermectin 200 mcg/kg x 1
PCP, pneumonia, MAC, lymphoma, toxo, line sepsis,
Send a cryptococcal antigen, blood cx for AFB, gallium scans or induced sputum for PCP
stavudine and didanosine when coadministered
didanosine and ribavarin coadministration
anecdotal reports of benefit from
thiamine 100 mg/day
riboflavin 50-200 mg/day
L-carnitine 990 mg tid
CoQ10 at least 50 mg/day
levels may be slow to normalize