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NUR HANISAH BINTI ZAINOREN
PAEDIATRIC
CONTENT
• Introduction
• Clinical manifestations
• Diagnosis
• Management
INTRODUCTION
• HIV is the virus which attacks the T-cells in the
immune system
• AIDS is the syndrome which appears in
advanced stages of HIV infection
• HIV is a virus
• AIDS is a medical condition
CLINICAL
MANIFESTATIONS
• Vary widely among infants, childrens and adolescents
• In most infants, physical examination at birth is normal
• Initial signs and symptoms may be subtle and non-
specific (eg: failure to thrive, lymphadenopathy,
hepatosplenomegaly, chronic/recurrent diarrhea,
interstitial pneumonia, oral thrush)
• In United States and Europe:
systemic and pulmonary
findings are common
• In Africa: chronic diarrhea,
wasting, malnutrition are
common
• Symptoms commonly found MORE in
CHILDREN than adults are:
– Recurrent bacterial infection
– Chronic parotid swelling
– Lymphocytic interstitial pneumonitis
– Early onset neurologic deterioration
• Paediatic HIV staged by two parameters
– Clinical status
– Degree of immunologic impairment
Clinical status
(WHO Clinical Staging of HIV/AIDS with Confirmed Infection)
• Clinical stage 1
• Clinical stage 2
• Clinical stage 3
• Clinical stage 4
Clinical status
(WHO Clinical Staging of HIV/AIDS with Confirmed Infection)
• Clinical stage 1
• Clinical stage 2
• Clinical stage 3
• Clinical stage 4
• Asymptomatic
• Persistent generalized
lymphadenopathy
Clinical status
(WHO Clinical Staging of HIV/AIDS with Confirmed Infection)
• Clinical stage 1
• Clinical stage 2
• Clinical stage 3
• Clinical stage 4
• Unexplained persistent hepatosplenomegaly
• Papular pruritic eruptions
• Fungal nail infection
• Angular cheilitis
• Lineal gingival erythema
• Extensive wart virus infection
• Extensive molluscum contagiosum
• Recurrent oral ulceration
• Unexplained persistent parotid enlargement
• Herpes zoster
• Recurrent/chronic URTI (otitis media,
otorrhea, sinusitis, tonsillitis)
Clinical status
(WHO Clinical Staging of HIV/AIDS with Confirmed Infection)
• Clinical stage 1
• Clinical stage 2
• Clinical stage 3
• Clinical stage 4
• Unexplained moderate malnutrition or wasting not
adequately responding to standard therapy
• Unexplained persistent diarrhea (14 days or more)
• Unexplained persistent fever
• Persistent oral candidiasis
• Oral hairy leukoplakia
• Acute necrotizing ulcerative gingivitis/periodontitis
• Lymph node TB
• Pulmonary TB
• Severe recurrent bacteria pneumonia
• Symptomatic lymphoid interstitial pneumonitis
• Chronic HIV-associated lung disease including
bronchiectasis
• Unexplained anemia, neutropenia or chronic
thrombocytopenia
Clinical status
(WHO Clinical Staging of HIV/AIDS with Confirmed Infection)
• Clinical stage 1
• Clinical stage 2
• Clinical stage 3
• Clinical stage 4
• Unexplained severe wasting, stunting or severe
malnutrition not responding to standard therapy
• Pneumocystic pneumonia
• Recurrent severe bacterial infections
• Chronic herpes simplex infection
• Esophageal candidiasis
• Extrapulmonary/disseminated TB
• Kaposi sarcoma
• CMV infection
• CNS toxoplasmosis
• Extrapulmonary cryptococcosis
• HIV encephalopathy
• Chronic cryptosprodiosis
• Chronic isosporiasis
• Cerebral or B cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma
• Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy
• Symptomatic HIV-associated nephropathy or HIV-
associated cardiomyopathy
Degree of immunologic impairment
(Severity of immmune suppression based on CD4 levels in children)
Immune Status Age
<11mo 12-35mo 36-59mo >5yr
Not significant >35% >30% >25% >500 cells/mm3
Mild 30-35% 25-30% 20-25% 350-499
cells/mm3
Advanced 25-30% 20-25% 15-20% 200-349
cells/mm3
Severe <25% or
<1500
cells/mm3
<20% or
<750 cells/mm3
<15% or
<350 cells/mm3
<15% or
<200 cells/mm3
Respiratory
diseases
 Pneumocystis pneumonia
 Recurrent bacterial infections
 Tuberculosis
 Viral infections
 Fungal infections
 Lymphoid interstitial
pneumonitis
Pneumocystis pneumonia
 Pneumocystis jiroveci
(previously P.carinii) pneumonia
(PCP) is the opportunistic
infection that led to the initial
description of AIDS
 Treatment: cotrimoxazole
 Untreated  FATAL
Recurrent bacterial infection
 90% had history of recurrent
pneumonias
 Initial episodes often occur before
the development of significant
immunosupression
 As the immunosuppression
frequency increases, the frequency
increases
Recurrent bacterial infection
 Community-acquired pneumonia:
 Strep. Pneumoniae
 H. influenza
 Staph. Aureus
 Hospital-acquired infection:
 Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Recurrent bacterial infection
 Treatment:
 Combination of a broad
spectrum cephalosporin +
aminoglycoside
 Nonsevere pneumonia: 2nd/3rd
generation cephalosporin or a
combination like amoxicillin-
clavulanic acid
 Supportive care
Tuberculosis
 More likely to have
extrapulmonary and
disseminated TB; course is
likely to be more rapid
 Coexistent TB + HIV
accelerate the progression
of both diseases
Tuberculosis
 The overall risk of active TB
in HIV-infected children is at
least 5-10 fold higher
 Should received longer
duration of antitubercular
therapy (9-12 month)
Viral infections
 Respiratory syncytial virus,
influenza and para influenza
viruses more often result in
symptomatic disease
 Adenovirus and measles virus
are more likely to lead to
serious sequelae
Fungal infections
 Primary infection is uncommon
 Pulmonary candidiasis should
be suspected in any sick HIV-
infected child with LRTI that
does not respond to the common
therapeutic modalities
Lymphoid Interstitial
pneumonitis (LIP)
 In absence of antiretroviral therapy,
nearly 20% of HIV-infected children
developed LIP
 Usually diagnosed in children with
perinatally acquired HIV infection
when they are older than 1yr of age
Lymphoid Interstitial
pneumonitis (LIP)
Characterized by nodule formation
and diffuse infiltration of the
alveolar septae by lymphocytes,
plasmacytoid lymphocytes, plasma
cells and immunoblasts
Lymphoid Interstitial
pneumonitis (LIP)
 Etiology and pathogenesis is not well understood
 Suggested etiologies are:
- Exagerrated immunologic
response to inhaled/circulating
antigens
- Primary infection of the lung
with HIV, EBV, or both
Lymphoid Interstitial
pneumonitis (LIP)
 Mostly are aymptomatic
 Severe Tachypnea, cough,
wheezing and hypoxemia
 Advanced Clubbing
 Can progress to chronic
respiratory failure/bronchiectasis
Lymphoid Interstitial
pneumonitis (LIP)
Diagnosis:
 Chest Xray: reticulonodular pattern,
with/without hilar lymphadenopathy
that persists =/>2 months
 Unresponsive to antimicrobial
therapy
 Histopathology (definitive diagnosis)
Lymphoid Interstitial
pneumonitis (LIP)
Management:
 Steroids – if children with LIP have
symptoms and signs of chronic
pulmonary disease, clubbing,
hypoxemia
 initial 4-12 week course of
prednisolone (2mg/kg/day) 
tapering dose
Gastrointestinal
diseases
Infections
 Bacteria – Salmonella,
Campylobacter, M. avium
 Protozoa* – Giardia,
Cryptosporidium, Isospora
 Fungi – Candida
 Virus – CMV, HSV, Rotavirus
* most severe
AIDS enteropathy
 a syndrome of malabsorption
with partial villous atrophy not
associated with a specific
pathogen
• Result of direct HIV infection of
the gut
Chronic liver inflammation
 Common in HIV infected children
 In some children, hepatitis caused by
CMV, hepatitis B or C viruses, or
mycobacteria may lead to liver failure
and portal hypertension.
*several of the antivirus drugs (eg: didanosine and protease inhibitors)
may also cause reversible elevation of transaminases
Pancreatitis
 Uncommon
 May be the result of drug therapy
(eg: didanosine, lamivudine,
nevirapine, or pentamidine)
 Rarely, opportunistic infections such
as mycobacteria or CMV may be
responsible for acute pancreatitis
Neurologic
diseases
Incidence may be >50% in
developing countries but
lower in developed countries.
With a median onset at about
one and a half year of age.
Progressive encephalopathy
 Loss/plateau of developmental
milestones
 Cognitive deterioration
 Impaired brain growthacquired
microcephaly
 Symmetric motor dysfunction
Meningitis
 Due to bacterial pathogens,
fungi (eg: Cryptococcus) and
a number of viruses may be
responsible
Toxoplasmosis
 Extremely rare in young
infants
 But may occur in HIV-
infected adolescents
Cardiovascular
diseases
Cardiac abnormalities is
common, persistent and often
progressive in HIV-infected
children
Left ventricular structure and
function progressively may
deteriorate in the first 3 years
of life  increased ventricular
mass
Children with encephalopathy
or other AIDS-defining
conditions have the highest
rates of adverse cardiac
outcomes
Resting sinus tachycardia and
marked sinus arrhythmia has
been reported in upto nearly
2/3 and in 1/5 of the HIV-
infected children
Congestive heart failure
clinically indicated by gallop
rhythm with tachypnea and
hepatosplenomegaly
Renal diseases
Nephrotic syndrome
with azotemia & normal
blood pressure
Renopathy
unusual
(more common
in older children)
• Principles of management of
gastrointestinal and neurological diseases
are similar to those in non-HIV-infected
children
• Electrocardiography and
echocardiography are helpful in assessing
cardiac function before the onset of
clinical symptoms
DIAGNOSIS
Diagnosis can be made by:
HIV antibody testing
(beyond 18 months of age)
Virological testing
(before 18 months of age)
HIV antibody testing
• All infants born to HIV-infected mothers are test antibody-
positive at birth (due to passive transfer of maternal HIV
antibody across placenta)
• Most uninfected children lose maternal antibody between 6-12
months of age; only small proportion continue to have up to 18
months of age
• Hence, positive IgG antibody tests in infant younger than this
age cannot be used to make definitive diagnosis
Methods:
 Demonstration of IgG antibody to HIV: -
- Reactive enzyme immunoassay (EIA)
 Confirmatory test
- Western blot
- Immunofluorescence assay
Virological testing
• Essential for young infants born to a HIV-
infected mother
• Methods:
- HIV DNA/RNA PCR
- HIV culture
- HIV p24 Ag immune dissociated p24
MANAGEMENT
• Management of HIV-infected child includes:
– Prophylaxis
– Antiretroviral therapy
– Treatment of opportunistic infection
– Adequate nutrition
– Immunization
Cotrimoxazole prophylaxis
• Recommended for:
1. All HIV-exposed infants, starting at 4-6 weeks of
age; continued until HIV infection can be excluded
2. HIV-exposed breastfeeding children of any age;
continued until can be excluded by HIV antibody
testing or virological testing at least 6 weeks after
complete cessation of breastfeeding
3. All children <1yr of age documented to be living
with HIV
4. Symptomatic children >1yr of age
*all children who begin cotrimoxazole prophylaxis
should continue until age of 5 yr, when they can be
reassessed
The World Health Organization
now recommends initiation of ART
for all HIV infected children <2yr age
irrespective of clinical symptoms and
the immunologic stage
Antiretroviral therapy
The currently available therapy does not
eradicate the virus and cure the child;
Rather it suppresses the virus replication for
extended periods of time
Antiretroviral therapy
The main 3 groups of drugs:
1. Nucleoside reverse transcriptase
inhibitors (NRTI)
2. Non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase
inhibitors (NNRTI)
3. Protease inhibitors (PI)
NRTI
• Zidovudine (AZT)
• Lamivudine (3TC)
• Stavudine (d4T)
• Abacavir (ABC)
• Didanosine
• Zalcitabine
NNRTI
• Nevirapine (NVP)
• Efavirenz (EFV)
PI
• Lopinavir (LPV)
• Amprenavir
• Indinavir
• Nelfinavir
• Ritonavir
• Saquinavir
• Highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) is a
combination of 2 NRTIs with a PI/NNRTI
• The national program recommends a combination of
Zidovudine + Lamivudine + Nevirapine (1st line therapy)
• Alternative regimen:
Stavudine + Lamivudine + Nevirapine
Nutrition
• It is important to provide adequate nutrition
to HIV-infected children.
• Many of these children have failure to thrive.
• These children will need nutritional
rehabilitation.
• Micronutrients like zinc may be useful
Immunization
• The vaccines that are recommended in the
national schecule can be administered to HIV
infected children except that symptomatic HIV
children should not be given oral polio and
BCG vaccines
Prevention of Mother to Child
Transmission (PMTCT)
the risk of MTCT can be reduced to under 2%
Antiretroviral
prophylaxis during
pregnancy
Intrapartum
interventions
Regimens for
infants
Avoidance of
breastfeeding
1. Antiretroviral drug regimens for
pregnant women
• FOR THEIR OWN HEALTH, ART
should be administered
irrespective of gestational age
and is continued throughout
pregnancy, delivery and
thereafter
(recommended for all HIV-infected pregnant
women with CD4 cell count <350cells/mm3 or
WHO clinical stage 3 or 4)
Recommended regimen for pregnant women
with indication of ART is combination of…
Zidovudine
(AZT)
Lamivudine
(3TC)
Nevirapine (NVP)
or Efavirenz (EFV)**EFV-based regimen should not be newly-initiated
during the first trimester of pregnancy
Recommended regimen for pregnant women
who are NOT ELIGIBLE for ART , BUT FOR
PREVENTING MTCT is…
To start ART as early as 14 weeks gestation OR
as soon as possible (when women present late
in pregnancy, in labor or at delivery)
*EFV-based regimen should not be newly-initiated
during the first trimester of pregnancy
For them, 2 options are available:
Option 1:
• Daily AZT in antepartum period
• AZT + single dose NVP at
onset of labor
• AZT + 3TC during labor
• AZT + 3TC for 7 days in
postpartum period
Option 2:
• Triple ART starting as early as 14
week of gestation until 1 week after
exposure to breastmilk has ended
• AZT + 3TC + LPV (lopinavir)
• AZT + 3TC + ABC (abacavir)
• AZT + 3TC + EFV
2. Regimens for infants
• If mother only received AZT during antenatal period:
– For BF infants: daily NVP from birth until 1 week after all
exposure to breast milk has ended
– For non-BF infants: daily AZT/NVP from birth until 6 week
• If mother received triple drug ART during pregnancy
and entire breastfeeding:
– daily AZT/NVP from birth until 6 weeks irrespective of
feeding Dosage:
NVP – 10mg/day (infants<2.5kg) or
15mg/day (infants>2.5kg) PO
AZT – 4mg/kg BD, PO
3. Intrapartum interventions
• Delivery by elective cesarean section at 38 weeks before
onset of labor and rupture of membrane should be
considered
• Avoid artificial rupture of membrane (ARMs) unless
medically indicated
• Avoid procedures increasing risk of exposure of child to
maternal blood and secretions like use of scalp electrodes
4. Breastfeeding
• Important modality of transmission of HIV infection in
developing countries
• Risk of infection via BF highest in the early months of BF
• Increase Risks:
– Detectable levels of HIV in breast milk
– Presence of mastitis
– Low maternal CD4+ T cell count
4. Breastfeeding
• Mothers known to be HIV-infected should only
give commercial infant formula milk as a
replacement feed when specific conditions are
met:
– referred earlier as affordable, feasible, acceptable,
sustainable and safe (AFASS) in 2006 WHO
recommendations on HIV and infant feeding
– Otherwise, exclusive BF during first 6 months of life
– Cessation of BF should be gradual
REFERENCE
Ghai Essential Paediatrics, 8th Edition, Vinod K Paul and Arvind Bagga
THANK YOU
NUR HANISAH ZAINOREN

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PAEDIATRICS HIV

  • 1. NUR HANISAH BINTI ZAINOREN PAEDIATRIC
  • 2. CONTENT • Introduction • Clinical manifestations • Diagnosis • Management
  • 4. • HIV is the virus which attacks the T-cells in the immune system • AIDS is the syndrome which appears in advanced stages of HIV infection • HIV is a virus • AIDS is a medical condition
  • 6. • Vary widely among infants, childrens and adolescents • In most infants, physical examination at birth is normal • Initial signs and symptoms may be subtle and non- specific (eg: failure to thrive, lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, chronic/recurrent diarrhea, interstitial pneumonia, oral thrush)
  • 7. • In United States and Europe: systemic and pulmonary findings are common • In Africa: chronic diarrhea, wasting, malnutrition are common
  • 8. • Symptoms commonly found MORE in CHILDREN than adults are: – Recurrent bacterial infection – Chronic parotid swelling – Lymphocytic interstitial pneumonitis – Early onset neurologic deterioration
  • 9. • Paediatic HIV staged by two parameters – Clinical status – Degree of immunologic impairment
  • 10. Clinical status (WHO Clinical Staging of HIV/AIDS with Confirmed Infection) • Clinical stage 1 • Clinical stage 2 • Clinical stage 3 • Clinical stage 4
  • 11. Clinical status (WHO Clinical Staging of HIV/AIDS with Confirmed Infection) • Clinical stage 1 • Clinical stage 2 • Clinical stage 3 • Clinical stage 4 • Asymptomatic • Persistent generalized lymphadenopathy
  • 12. Clinical status (WHO Clinical Staging of HIV/AIDS with Confirmed Infection) • Clinical stage 1 • Clinical stage 2 • Clinical stage 3 • Clinical stage 4 • Unexplained persistent hepatosplenomegaly • Papular pruritic eruptions • Fungal nail infection • Angular cheilitis • Lineal gingival erythema • Extensive wart virus infection • Extensive molluscum contagiosum • Recurrent oral ulceration • Unexplained persistent parotid enlargement • Herpes zoster • Recurrent/chronic URTI (otitis media, otorrhea, sinusitis, tonsillitis)
  • 13. Clinical status (WHO Clinical Staging of HIV/AIDS with Confirmed Infection) • Clinical stage 1 • Clinical stage 2 • Clinical stage 3 • Clinical stage 4 • Unexplained moderate malnutrition or wasting not adequately responding to standard therapy • Unexplained persistent diarrhea (14 days or more) • Unexplained persistent fever • Persistent oral candidiasis • Oral hairy leukoplakia • Acute necrotizing ulcerative gingivitis/periodontitis • Lymph node TB • Pulmonary TB • Severe recurrent bacteria pneumonia • Symptomatic lymphoid interstitial pneumonitis • Chronic HIV-associated lung disease including bronchiectasis • Unexplained anemia, neutropenia or chronic thrombocytopenia
  • 14. Clinical status (WHO Clinical Staging of HIV/AIDS with Confirmed Infection) • Clinical stage 1 • Clinical stage 2 • Clinical stage 3 • Clinical stage 4 • Unexplained severe wasting, stunting or severe malnutrition not responding to standard therapy • Pneumocystic pneumonia • Recurrent severe bacterial infections • Chronic herpes simplex infection • Esophageal candidiasis • Extrapulmonary/disseminated TB • Kaposi sarcoma • CMV infection • CNS toxoplasmosis • Extrapulmonary cryptococcosis • HIV encephalopathy • Chronic cryptosprodiosis • Chronic isosporiasis • Cerebral or B cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma • Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy • Symptomatic HIV-associated nephropathy or HIV- associated cardiomyopathy
  • 15. Degree of immunologic impairment (Severity of immmune suppression based on CD4 levels in children) Immune Status Age <11mo 12-35mo 36-59mo >5yr Not significant >35% >30% >25% >500 cells/mm3 Mild 30-35% 25-30% 20-25% 350-499 cells/mm3 Advanced 25-30% 20-25% 15-20% 200-349 cells/mm3 Severe <25% or <1500 cells/mm3 <20% or <750 cells/mm3 <15% or <350 cells/mm3 <15% or <200 cells/mm3
  • 17.  Pneumocystis pneumonia  Recurrent bacterial infections  Tuberculosis  Viral infections  Fungal infections  Lymphoid interstitial pneumonitis
  • 18. Pneumocystis pneumonia  Pneumocystis jiroveci (previously P.carinii) pneumonia (PCP) is the opportunistic infection that led to the initial description of AIDS  Treatment: cotrimoxazole  Untreated  FATAL
  • 19. Recurrent bacterial infection  90% had history of recurrent pneumonias  Initial episodes often occur before the development of significant immunosupression  As the immunosuppression frequency increases, the frequency increases
  • 20. Recurrent bacterial infection  Community-acquired pneumonia:  Strep. Pneumoniae  H. influenza  Staph. Aureus  Hospital-acquired infection:  Pseudomonas aeruginosa
  • 21. Recurrent bacterial infection  Treatment:  Combination of a broad spectrum cephalosporin + aminoglycoside  Nonsevere pneumonia: 2nd/3rd generation cephalosporin or a combination like amoxicillin- clavulanic acid  Supportive care
  • 22. Tuberculosis  More likely to have extrapulmonary and disseminated TB; course is likely to be more rapid  Coexistent TB + HIV accelerate the progression of both diseases
  • 23. Tuberculosis  The overall risk of active TB in HIV-infected children is at least 5-10 fold higher  Should received longer duration of antitubercular therapy (9-12 month)
  • 24. Viral infections  Respiratory syncytial virus, influenza and para influenza viruses more often result in symptomatic disease  Adenovirus and measles virus are more likely to lead to serious sequelae
  • 25. Fungal infections  Primary infection is uncommon  Pulmonary candidiasis should be suspected in any sick HIV- infected child with LRTI that does not respond to the common therapeutic modalities
  • 26. Lymphoid Interstitial pneumonitis (LIP)  In absence of antiretroviral therapy, nearly 20% of HIV-infected children developed LIP  Usually diagnosed in children with perinatally acquired HIV infection when they are older than 1yr of age
  • 27. Lymphoid Interstitial pneumonitis (LIP) Characterized by nodule formation and diffuse infiltration of the alveolar septae by lymphocytes, plasmacytoid lymphocytes, plasma cells and immunoblasts
  • 28. Lymphoid Interstitial pneumonitis (LIP)  Etiology and pathogenesis is not well understood  Suggested etiologies are: - Exagerrated immunologic response to inhaled/circulating antigens - Primary infection of the lung with HIV, EBV, or both
  • 29. Lymphoid Interstitial pneumonitis (LIP)  Mostly are aymptomatic  Severe Tachypnea, cough, wheezing and hypoxemia  Advanced Clubbing  Can progress to chronic respiratory failure/bronchiectasis
  • 30. Lymphoid Interstitial pneumonitis (LIP) Diagnosis:  Chest Xray: reticulonodular pattern, with/without hilar lymphadenopathy that persists =/>2 months  Unresponsive to antimicrobial therapy  Histopathology (definitive diagnosis)
  • 31. Lymphoid Interstitial pneumonitis (LIP) Management:  Steroids – if children with LIP have symptoms and signs of chronic pulmonary disease, clubbing, hypoxemia  initial 4-12 week course of prednisolone (2mg/kg/day)  tapering dose
  • 33. Infections  Bacteria – Salmonella, Campylobacter, M. avium  Protozoa* – Giardia, Cryptosporidium, Isospora  Fungi – Candida  Virus – CMV, HSV, Rotavirus * most severe
  • 34. AIDS enteropathy  a syndrome of malabsorption with partial villous atrophy not associated with a specific pathogen • Result of direct HIV infection of the gut
  • 35. Chronic liver inflammation  Common in HIV infected children  In some children, hepatitis caused by CMV, hepatitis B or C viruses, or mycobacteria may lead to liver failure and portal hypertension. *several of the antivirus drugs (eg: didanosine and protease inhibitors) may also cause reversible elevation of transaminases
  • 36. Pancreatitis  Uncommon  May be the result of drug therapy (eg: didanosine, lamivudine, nevirapine, or pentamidine)  Rarely, opportunistic infections such as mycobacteria or CMV may be responsible for acute pancreatitis
  • 38. Incidence may be >50% in developing countries but lower in developed countries. With a median onset at about one and a half year of age.
  • 39. Progressive encephalopathy  Loss/plateau of developmental milestones  Cognitive deterioration  Impaired brain growthacquired microcephaly  Symmetric motor dysfunction
  • 40. Meningitis  Due to bacterial pathogens, fungi (eg: Cryptococcus) and a number of viruses may be responsible
  • 41. Toxoplasmosis  Extremely rare in young infants  But may occur in HIV- infected adolescents
  • 43. Cardiac abnormalities is common, persistent and often progressive in HIV-infected children
  • 44. Left ventricular structure and function progressively may deteriorate in the first 3 years of life  increased ventricular mass
  • 45. Children with encephalopathy or other AIDS-defining conditions have the highest rates of adverse cardiac outcomes
  • 46. Resting sinus tachycardia and marked sinus arrhythmia has been reported in upto nearly 2/3 and in 1/5 of the HIV- infected children
  • 47. Congestive heart failure clinically indicated by gallop rhythm with tachypnea and hepatosplenomegaly
  • 49. Nephrotic syndrome with azotemia & normal blood pressure Renopathy unusual (more common in older children)
  • 50. • Principles of management of gastrointestinal and neurological diseases are similar to those in non-HIV-infected children • Electrocardiography and echocardiography are helpful in assessing cardiac function before the onset of clinical symptoms
  • 52. Diagnosis can be made by: HIV antibody testing (beyond 18 months of age) Virological testing (before 18 months of age)
  • 53. HIV antibody testing • All infants born to HIV-infected mothers are test antibody- positive at birth (due to passive transfer of maternal HIV antibody across placenta) • Most uninfected children lose maternal antibody between 6-12 months of age; only small proportion continue to have up to 18 months of age • Hence, positive IgG antibody tests in infant younger than this age cannot be used to make definitive diagnosis
  • 54. Methods:  Demonstration of IgG antibody to HIV: - - Reactive enzyme immunoassay (EIA)  Confirmatory test - Western blot - Immunofluorescence assay
  • 55. Virological testing • Essential for young infants born to a HIV- infected mother • Methods: - HIV DNA/RNA PCR - HIV culture - HIV p24 Ag immune dissociated p24
  • 57. • Management of HIV-infected child includes: – Prophylaxis – Antiretroviral therapy – Treatment of opportunistic infection – Adequate nutrition – Immunization
  • 58. Cotrimoxazole prophylaxis • Recommended for: 1. All HIV-exposed infants, starting at 4-6 weeks of age; continued until HIV infection can be excluded 2. HIV-exposed breastfeeding children of any age; continued until can be excluded by HIV antibody testing or virological testing at least 6 weeks after complete cessation of breastfeeding
  • 59. 3. All children <1yr of age documented to be living with HIV 4. Symptomatic children >1yr of age *all children who begin cotrimoxazole prophylaxis should continue until age of 5 yr, when they can be reassessed
  • 60. The World Health Organization now recommends initiation of ART for all HIV infected children <2yr age irrespective of clinical symptoms and the immunologic stage Antiretroviral therapy
  • 61. The currently available therapy does not eradicate the virus and cure the child; Rather it suppresses the virus replication for extended periods of time
  • 62. Antiretroviral therapy The main 3 groups of drugs: 1. Nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTI) 2. Non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTI) 3. Protease inhibitors (PI)
  • 63. NRTI • Zidovudine (AZT) • Lamivudine (3TC) • Stavudine (d4T) • Abacavir (ABC) • Didanosine • Zalcitabine NNRTI • Nevirapine (NVP) • Efavirenz (EFV) PI • Lopinavir (LPV) • Amprenavir • Indinavir • Nelfinavir • Ritonavir • Saquinavir
  • 64. • Highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) is a combination of 2 NRTIs with a PI/NNRTI • The national program recommends a combination of Zidovudine + Lamivudine + Nevirapine (1st line therapy) • Alternative regimen: Stavudine + Lamivudine + Nevirapine
  • 65. Nutrition • It is important to provide adequate nutrition to HIV-infected children. • Many of these children have failure to thrive. • These children will need nutritional rehabilitation. • Micronutrients like zinc may be useful
  • 66. Immunization • The vaccines that are recommended in the national schecule can be administered to HIV infected children except that symptomatic HIV children should not be given oral polio and BCG vaccines
  • 67. Prevention of Mother to Child Transmission (PMTCT)
  • 68. the risk of MTCT can be reduced to under 2% Antiretroviral prophylaxis during pregnancy Intrapartum interventions Regimens for infants Avoidance of breastfeeding
  • 69. 1. Antiretroviral drug regimens for pregnant women • FOR THEIR OWN HEALTH, ART should be administered irrespective of gestational age and is continued throughout pregnancy, delivery and thereafter (recommended for all HIV-infected pregnant women with CD4 cell count <350cells/mm3 or WHO clinical stage 3 or 4)
  • 70. Recommended regimen for pregnant women with indication of ART is combination of… Zidovudine (AZT) Lamivudine (3TC) Nevirapine (NVP) or Efavirenz (EFV)**EFV-based regimen should not be newly-initiated during the first trimester of pregnancy
  • 71. Recommended regimen for pregnant women who are NOT ELIGIBLE for ART , BUT FOR PREVENTING MTCT is… To start ART as early as 14 weeks gestation OR as soon as possible (when women present late in pregnancy, in labor or at delivery) *EFV-based regimen should not be newly-initiated during the first trimester of pregnancy
  • 72. For them, 2 options are available: Option 1: • Daily AZT in antepartum period • AZT + single dose NVP at onset of labor • AZT + 3TC during labor • AZT + 3TC for 7 days in postpartum period Option 2: • Triple ART starting as early as 14 week of gestation until 1 week after exposure to breastmilk has ended • AZT + 3TC + LPV (lopinavir) • AZT + 3TC + ABC (abacavir) • AZT + 3TC + EFV
  • 73. 2. Regimens for infants • If mother only received AZT during antenatal period: – For BF infants: daily NVP from birth until 1 week after all exposure to breast milk has ended – For non-BF infants: daily AZT/NVP from birth until 6 week • If mother received triple drug ART during pregnancy and entire breastfeeding: – daily AZT/NVP from birth until 6 weeks irrespective of feeding Dosage: NVP – 10mg/day (infants<2.5kg) or 15mg/day (infants>2.5kg) PO AZT – 4mg/kg BD, PO
  • 74. 3. Intrapartum interventions • Delivery by elective cesarean section at 38 weeks before onset of labor and rupture of membrane should be considered • Avoid artificial rupture of membrane (ARMs) unless medically indicated • Avoid procedures increasing risk of exposure of child to maternal blood and secretions like use of scalp electrodes
  • 75. 4. Breastfeeding • Important modality of transmission of HIV infection in developing countries • Risk of infection via BF highest in the early months of BF • Increase Risks: – Detectable levels of HIV in breast milk – Presence of mastitis – Low maternal CD4+ T cell count
  • 76. 4. Breastfeeding • Mothers known to be HIV-infected should only give commercial infant formula milk as a replacement feed when specific conditions are met: – referred earlier as affordable, feasible, acceptable, sustainable and safe (AFASS) in 2006 WHO recommendations on HIV and infant feeding – Otherwise, exclusive BF during first 6 months of life – Cessation of BF should be gradual
  • 77. REFERENCE Ghai Essential Paediatrics, 8th Edition, Vinod K Paul and Arvind Bagga

Hinweis der Redaktion

  1. Exclusive BF has been reported to carry a lower risk of HIV transmission than mixed feeding