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Human Immunodeficiency Virus. Recent United States Epidemiology. HIVEstimated 800,000-900,000 people with HIV40,000 new cases each yearHepatitis B750,000-1 million carriers in the USHepatitis CEstimated 3.9 million total US infections (1.8% of US population) CDC
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1. Human Immunodeficiency Virus and Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome “HIV / AIDS” K. Brooks, RN, MSNEd
Nursing 240
2. Human Immunodeficiency Virus
3. Recent United States Epidemiology HIV
Estimated 800,000-900,000 people with HIV
40,000 new cases each year
Hepatitis B
750,000-1 million carriers in the US
Hepatitis C
Estimated 3.9 million total US infections (1.8% of US population)
CDC – AIDS Surveillance Report
4. AIDS Is a World Wide Epidemic!
16 million people were killed and 50 million were infected
13 million people killed by AIDS
9. By 2002 … there were (only) 57 health care workersin the US who had been infected with HIV after an occupational exposure
10. Transmission What we know about HIV transmission …
US Cases …
What about blood transfusions?
What about perinatal incidence?
11. Exposure: Infectious Body Fluids Definitely infectious
Potentially infectious
Not infectious unless visibly bloody
12. Estimates of Per-ExposureInfection Risk Type of Exposure % Probability
Unprotected Receptive Anal
Intercourse 1.7
Sharing Needles 0.67
Percutaneous Occupational Exposure 0.32
Receptive Vaginal Intercourse (female) 0.05 - 0.14
Insertive Vaginal Intercourse (male) 0.03 - 0.09
Oral Sex unknown;
not zero
13. “About 1/2 of all new HIV infections in the United States are among people under age 25 years!
“The majority are infected through sexual behavior. “
“HIV infection is the leading cause of death for African American men aged 25 to 44”
14. What does the HIV virus do? Cell invasion and replication
Reverse transcriptase (RNA to DNA)
Rapid destruction of CD4+ T (T helper) cells
B-lymphocytes make antibodies
Changes in the immune system
15. “Viral Load”
“Large amounts of the virus can be found in the blood during the first 2 to 6 months after infection and then again in the late stages of the disease”
16. “CD4+ (T) Cell Counts” Uninfected Individuals
CD 4+ levels: 800-1200 cells/microliter
“T cells” (helper cells)
HIV Infected Individuals
HIV virus destroys 1 billion CD4+ cells per day
CD4+ gradually declines to very low levels
Immune problems begin when the level drops to 200-500
< 50 cells/ml in advanced disease is common
17. “The Train Wreck” Think of the “Viral Load” as the train and the “CD4+ T
cell count” as the track. When the train reaches the end
of the track, AIDS has begun.
GOAL: So, you are hoping for a “slow train” (or low
viral count) or a “long train track” (high CD4+ count)
19. Clinical Manifestations:The Phases Of Infection Initial Infection “Acute Retroviral Syndrome”
1 to 3 weeks
“Flu-Like Symptoms”
Early Chronic Infection (Latent Phase)
10 to 12 years
Intermediate Chronic Infection (AIDS syndrome)
20. Primary HIV Infection - Symptoms Fever 87%
Rash 68%
Pharyngitis 48%
Myalgias 42%
Headache 39%
Diarrhea 32%
Abdominal Pain 32%
Arthralgias 29%
Nausea/Vomiting 29%
21. Diagnostic Testing: “HIV Antibody” FIRST:
The EIA (ELISA) detects serum antibodies (positive )
SECOND:
EIA (ELISA) is repeated
THIRD:
Western Blot is done
Be aware of the “window period”
Diagnosis of newborns can be problematic
Table 14-2 pg 271
22. CDC Diagnostic Criteria for AIDS “HIV disease progresses to AIDS when your CD4+ cell count drops below 200 cells/mm3 and/or you develop an AIDS defining condition (an illness that is very unusual in someone who is not HIV positive)”
23. Common Opportunistic Diseases Candida Albicans (thrush) – yeast/fungus
Pneumocystis Carinii - fungus
Kaposi’s Sarcoma - cancer
Toxoplasma gondii - protozoa
Cytomegalovirus - virus
HSV-2 peri-anal – virus
Tuberculosis - myobacteria
* Review the common signs/symptoms of each of these syndromes
24. Opportunistic Diseases
29. Herpes Simplex (HSV)Herpes Simplex (HSV)
32. Nursing Process: Assessment What are important
assessment foci for those
at risk for HIV or those
who may have been
infected with HIV?
Health Promotion
Primary Prevention
Secondary Prevention
33. Nursing Process: Planning and Implementation
35. Nursing Process: Planning What are the
major goals for
patients with
HIV?
36. Goals of Drug Therapy in HIV Decrease HIV RNA levels < 50 copies
Maintain or raise CD4+ T cell counts >200
Preferred CD4 count 800-1200
Delay opportunistic symptoms
37. Nursing Process: Evaluation Successful treatment suppresses HIV to very low levels (e.g., < 50 copies/ml), preventing destruction of CD4 cells by HIV
However, if treatment is withdrawn, viral rebound can occur quickly
Monitoring labs and symptoms of patient
*** “Viral load” counts (PCR assay)
CD4+ cell (T-lymphocyte) counts
38. “Antiretroviral Therapy” - medication that has been demonstrated to suppress viral replication
39. Recommended: HAART 1) NRTI’s
2) NNRTI’s
3) PI’s
Common side effects:
Liver problems, diabetes, lipodystrophy,
high cholesterol, increased bleeding,
decreased bone density, skin rash
I. I.
40.
41. Adherence / Compliance
“Drugs don’t work if people don’t take them.”
C. Everett Koop, MD
Former U.S. Surgeon General
42. Strategies for Health Care Providers“Increase Adherence / Compliance” Establish patient/HCP rapport
Clarify the regimen
Tailor regimen to lifestyle
Have pt establish time to set out pills
Establish set places for pill taking
Plan any changes in routine in advance
Make plans for holidays, weekends
Lower barriers to care
Refer to social services / cost factors
Follow-up
43. Be SAFE and RESPONSIBLE! What would you do if you received a needle stick injury in the workplace?
What is the procedure you must follow?
What does OSHA say???