Abstract
Objective: To examine cognitive function in patients at various stages of HIV infection, and to determine the nature and severity associated with stage of illness.
Design: Subjects were administered an extensive battery of neuropsychological tests.
Subjects: Two hundred and thirty-three HIV-1 -infected homosexual/bisexual men and 77 HIV-negative control subjects who had been screened for previous neurological illness. All subjects were volunteers in a longitudinal study of neurobehavioral complications of HIV infection.
Results: Patients with symptomatic infection differed from controls on a large number of measures, and asymptomatic patients had a more circumscribed pattern of deficit. On a summary measure of cognitive impairment, there was a twofold increase in the prevalence of impairment in asymptomatic patients relative to controls, and a fourfold increase in symptomatic patients. Memory and dexterity problems appear to be early features of neurobehavioral dysfunction, and frontal lobe deficits were found in patients with symptomatic infection.
Conclusion: These data indicate that there is a steady increase in the prevalence of neurobehavioral abnormalities associated with stage of infection. The pattern of abnormality also varies with disease stage.