The clinical landscape of HIV has evolved from a fatal disease to a manageable condition, giving rise to secondary complications associated with the chronic infection still present under treatment. HIV penetrates the brain very early after infection. Here, we investigated the mechanism behind structural brain changes observed in 92 aviremic HIV patients compared to 125 seronegative controls using quantitative MRI. Changes in cortical and subcortical structures and T1 relaxation times were observed. We thus speculate that the differential pattern in HIV patients reflects biological mechanisms underlying different stages of brain infection, namely acute inflammation and neuronal loss.
This abstract and the presentation materials are available to members only; a login is required.