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Journal ArticleDOI

Neuropathology of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infection

Herbert Budka
- 01 Apr 1991 - 
- Vol. 1, Iss: 3, pp 163-175
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TLDR
Neuropathologic and other data suggest two major pathogenetic pathways of HIV‐associated CNS damage: systemic and local increase of the virus load leads to HIV encephalitis or HIV leukoencephalopathy; this is corroborated by prominent HIV production within such lesions.
Abstract
Neuropathology has defined novel HIV-specific diseases at tissue level: HIV encephalitis and HIV leukoencephalopathy. Both occur usually in the later stages of the AIDS infection and consistently demonstrate large amounts of HIV products. In contrast to this HIV-specific neuropathology, HlV-asso-ciated neuropathology features unspecific syndromes with disputed relation to HIV infection: myelin pallor, vacuolar myelopathy, vacuolar leukoencephalopathy, lymphocytic meningitis, and diffuse poliodystrophy. All types of neuropathology may contribute to clinical manifestation according to severity, extent, and distribution of lesions, but clinico-pathologic correlation may be poor in the individual case. Neuropathologic and other data suggest two major pathogenetic pathways of HIV-associated CNS damage: First, systemic and local increase of the virus load leads to HIV encephalitis or HIV leukoencephalopathy; this is corroborated by prominent HIV production within such lesions. Second, neuronotoxicity by HIV proteins or factors secreted from infected cells is supported by histological changes of diffuse poliodystrophy and by morphometric loss of frontocortical neurons.

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Citations
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Microglia and cytokines in neurological disease, with special reference to AIDS and Alzheimer's disease

TL;DR: The results suggest that microglial activation in AD may be secondary to neurodegeneration and that, once activated, microglia may participate in a local inflammatory cascade that promotes tissue damage and contributes to amyloid formation.
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Immunocytochemical quantitation of human immunodeficiency virus in the brain: Correlations with dementia

TL;DR: It is concluded that the presence of macrophages and microglia is a better correlate with HIV‐associated dementia than is the presence and amount of HIV‐infected cells in the brain.
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Central nervous system damage produced by expression of the HIV-1 coat protein gp120 in transgenic mice.

TL;DR: In vivo evidence is provided that gp120 plays a key part in HIV-1-associated nervous system impairment and this model should facilitate the evaluation and development of therapeutic strategies aimed at HIV–brain interactions.
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Seminars in medicine of the Beth Israel Hospital, Boston. Dementia associated with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome.

TL;DR: One third of adults and half of children with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) eventually have neurologic complications, which are directly attributable to infection of the brain by the human immunoveficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1).
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Intracerebral cytokine messenger RNA expression in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome dementia.

TL;DR: Levels of IL‐4 messenger RNA were decreased in dementia and the loss of this and other macrophage downregulatory factors in demented patients may contribute to the increased expression of tumor necrosis factor‐α.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Detection, Isolation, and Continuous Production of Cytopathic Retroviruses (HTLV-III) from Patients with AIDS and Pre-AIDS

TL;DR: A cell system was developed for the reproducible detection of human T-lymphotropic retroviruses (HTLV family) from patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) or with signs or symptoms that frequently precede AIDS (pre-AIDS), and it provides large amounts of virus for detailed molecular and immunological analyses.
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Detection of AIDS virus in macrophages in brain tissue from AIDS patients with encephalopathy.

TL;DR: The identity of an important cell type that supports replication of the AIDS retrovirus in brain tissue was determined in two affected individuals and these cells were mononucleated and multinucleated macrophages that actively synthesized viral RNA and produced progeny virions in the brains of the patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

The AIDS dementia complex: II. Neuropathology

TL;DR: The AIDS dementia complex is established as a distinct clinical and pathological entity and, together with accumulating virological evidence, suggests that it is caused by direct LAV/HTLV‐III brain infection.
Journal ArticleDOI

The brain in AIDS: central nervous system HIV-1 infection and AIDS dementia complex

TL;DR: Within the context of the permissive effect of immunosuppression, genetic changes in HIV-1 may underlie the neuropathological heterogeneity of the AIDS dementia complex and its relatively independent course in relation to the systemic manifestations of AIDS noted in some patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cellular localization of human immunodeficiency virus infection within the brains of acquired immune deficiency syndrome patients

TL;DR: The brains of 12 AIDS patients were studied using in situ hybridization to identify human immunodeficiency virus nucleic acid sequences and immunocytochemistry to identify viral and cellular proteins, suggesting that CNS dysfunction is due to indirect effects rather than neuronal or glial infection.
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