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      Establishment of the serologic testing algorithm for recent human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) seroconversion (STARHS) strategy in the city of São Paulo, Brazil

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          Abstract

          Several strategies aim at characterizing the AIDS epidemic in different parts of the world. Among these, the identification of recent HIV-1 infections using the recently described serologic testing algorithm for recent human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) seroconversion (STARHS) strategy was employed in four testing sites of the City of São Paulo Public Health Department (CSPPHD). Those identified as recently infected were invited to participate in a prospective clinical and laboratory evaluation study. We describe the establishment of the patient identification network and the success in enrolling the participants, as well as their clinical and laboratory characteristics. From May to December 2002, 6,443 persons were tested for HIV in the four participating sites, of whom 384 (5.96%) tested HIV-1 positive; 43 (11.2%) of them were identified as recently infected. Twenty-two were successfully enrolled in the follow-up study, but three of them did not meet clinical and/or laboratory criteria for recent HIV-1 infection. After these exclusions, the laboratory findings revealed a median CD4+ T lymphocyte count of 585 cells/muL (inter-quartile range 25-75% [IQR], 372-754), a CD8+ T lymphocyte count of 886 cells/muL (IQR, 553-1098), a viral load of 11,000 HIV-RNA copies/mL (IQR, 3,650-78,150), log10 of 4.04 (IQR 3.56-4.88). The identification of recent HIV infections is an extremely valuable way to evaluate the spread of the virus in a given population, especially when cohort studies, considered the gold standard method to evaluate incidence, are not available. This work demonstrated that establishing a network to identify such patients is a feasible task, even considering the difficulties in a large, resource-limited country or city.

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          Seasonal prevalence of intestinal parasites in the United States during 2000.

          N D Amin (2002)
          One-third of 5,792 fecal specimens from 2,896 patients in 48 states and the District of Columbia tested positive for intestinal parasites during the year 2000. Multiple infections with 2-4 parasitic species constituted 10% of 916 infected cases. Blastocystis hominis infected 662 patients (23% or 72% of the 916 cases). Its prevalence appears to be increasing in recent years. Eighteen other species of intestinal parasites were identified. Cryptosporidium parvum and Entamoeba histolytica/E. dispar ranked second and third in prevalence, respectively. Prevalence of infection was lowest (22-27%) in winter, gradually increased during the spring, reached peaks of 36-43% between July and October, and gradually decreased to 32% in December. A new superior method of parasite detection using the Proto-fix-CONSED system for fixing, transport, and processing of fecal specimens is described. In single infections, pathogenic protozoa caused asymptomatic subclinical infections in 0-31 % of the cases and non-pathogenic protozoa unexpectedly caused symptoms in 73-100% of the cases. The relationship between Charcot-Leyden crystals and infection with four species of intestinal parasites is examined and the list of provoking parasitic causes is expanded.
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            Recomendações para Terapia Anti-Retroviral em Adultos e Adolescentes Infectados pelo HIV, 2006.

            (2006)
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              Diagnostic value of specific IgM antibodies in primary HIV infection.

              Sequential serum samples from 55 homosexual men with primary HIV infection were tested for IgM anti-HIV. An early IgM response was found in 27 out of 55 (49%). In five cases IgM anti-HIV was detected 1-3 1/4 months prior to IgG anti-HIV seroconversion, as detected by a commercially available ELISA, but in no case was IgM detected prior to IgG anti-HIV seroconversion, as detected by the more sensitive GACRIA (IgG antibody captive radio-immunoassay, see Subjects and methods) and immunoblot assays. In 22 out of 23 men (96%) the primary IgM response did not persist beyond 3 months. HIV antigenaemia was found before HIV antibody seroconversion in 6 out of 55 (11%) and concomitant with HIV antibody seroconversion in 8 out of 55 (15%) subjects. A 'flu-like' illness that might be ascribed to primary HIV infection was found in 37 out of 50 men (74%). A blood sample was taken from 11 men during or within 2 weeks of the illness: no serological markers of HIV infection were detected in four subjects, HIV antigen, IgM and IgG anti-HIV were detected in another four, HIV antigen was the only marker of HIV infection in two subjects, and in one subject, IgM and IgG anti-HIV were detected but not HIV antigen. These results indicate that no conclusive value can be attached to a negative IgM test in suspected primary HIV infection, and that any role for IgM anti-HIV testing in blood donor screening is highly questionable.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
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                Journal
                bjid
                Brazilian Journal of Infectious Diseases
                Braz J Infect Dis
                Brazilian Society of Infectious Diseases (Salvador )
                1678-4391
                December 2004
                : 8
                : 6
                : 399-406
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Universidade Federal de São Paulo Brazil
                [2 ] Public Health Department of São Paulo
                [3 ] Henfil Counseling Testing Center
                [4 ] Specialized Attending Service in STD/Aids Campos Elíseos
                [5 ] Prevention and Attendance Center in STD/Aids Lapa
                [6 ] Pirituba Counseling Testing Center
                [7 ] Lapa City Central Laboratory Brazil
                Article
                S1413-86702004000600003
                10.1590/S1413-86702004000600003
                cae6dabe-3e01-4e3a-928a-a0b4adb1705c

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

                History
                Product

                SciELO Brazil

                Self URI (journal page): http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_serial&pid=1413-8670&lng=en
                Categories
                INFECTIOUS DISEASES

                Infectious disease & Microbiology
                HIV,recent infection,network,São Paulo
                Infectious disease & Microbiology
                HIV, recent infection, network, São Paulo

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