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Neurologic status of human immunodeficiency virus 1-infected infants and their controls: a prospective study from birth to 2 years. Mothers and Infants Cohort Study
Belman, A L; Muenz, L R; Marcus, J C; Goedert, J J; Landesman, S; Rubinstein, A; Goodwin, S; Durako, S; Willoughby, A
OBJECTIVE: To determine the timing, extent, severity, and persistence of neurologic abnormalities in children with perinatally acquired human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1) infection compared with similar uninfected children of HIV-1-infected women and control children. METHODS: Serial neurologic examinations and head circumference measurements were performed on a cohort of HIV-1-infected children born to HIV-1-infected women, seroreverting children born to HIV-1-infected women, and control children born to uninfected women. Examination data from 32 HIV-1-infected children, 99 reverters, and 116 control children were summarized by eight neurologic domains. Data were analyzed by longitudinal analysis. RESULTS: Reverter children were not different from control children in neurologic function for any of the eight domains or head circumference. HIV-1-infected children had significantly more neurologic problems than the control and reverter children for seven of the eight domains. The HIV-1-infected children were further classified by whether they had acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS)-defining clinical conditions (other than lymphoid interstitial pneumonitis) in the first 24 months of life (the AIDS-opportunistic infection group) or did not (the infected-other group). Neurologic abnormalities were early, severe, pervasive, and persistent in the AIDS-opportunistic infection group, and nearly all in this group had head circumference measurements below the 10th percentile. The infected-other group had no statistically significant differences from the uninfected children, although individual children in the infected-other group had some abnormalities. CONCLUSIONS: In utero exposure to HIV-1 without infection seems to have no negative impact on neurologic function in children in the first 2 years of life. Among children with perinatally acquired HIV-1 infection, the most severe and pervasive neurologic problems occur in those children who have early serious HIV-1 clinical disease. Most children without serious AIDS-defining clinical conditions in the first 2 years of life are also free from serious neurologic problems during that period.
PMID: 8951261
ISSN: 0031-4005
CID: 2153762
Cerebrospinal fluid culture positive for North American lyme meningitis [Meeting Abstract]
Coyle, PK; Belman, A; Krupp, LB; Dattwyler, RJ; Luft, BJ
ISI:A1996VG79500050
ISSN: 0364-5134
CID: 2233552
Visuoconstructive and motor skills in children with vertical human immunodeficiency-1 infection [Meeting Abstract]
Preston, T; Demarco, R; Milazzo, MC; Taylor, FL; Reilly, D; Nachman, S; Belman, AL
ISI:A1996VC68900121
ISSN: 0364-5134
CID: 2236962
Detection of Borrelia burgdorferi-specific antigen in antibody-negative cerebrospinal fluid in neurologic Lyme disease
Coyle, P K; Schutzer, S E; Deng, Z; Krupp, L B; Belman, A L; Benach, J L; Luft, B J
OBJECTIVE: To determine the potential of detection in CSF of specific Borrelia burgdorferi antigen, OspA, as a marker of infection in neurologic Lyme disease and compare this with the detection of antibody. DESIGN: CSF from 83 neurologic patients in an area highly endemic for Lyme disease was examined prospectively for (1) OspA by antigen capture ELISA and Western blot employing monoclonal antibodies, and for (2) B burgdorferi antibodies by ELISA. RESULTS: Of the 35 of 83 (42%) patients who were positive for OspA antigen in their CSF, 15 (43%) were antigen positive despite being antibody-negative in CSF. Seven of these 15 (47%) had otherwise normal routine CSF analyses. Six of these 15 (40%) patients met strict CDC surveillance criteria for Lyme disease; four (27%) patients had seroconversion coincident with new neurologic problems; and three (20%) with characteristic syndromes for Lyme disease were seronegative, but had complexed antibody to B burgdorferi. The final two patients (13%) were seropositive and had unexplained neurologic problems not characteristic of Lyme disease. CONCLUSIONS: B burgdorferi antigen can be detected in CSF that is otherwise normal by conventional methodology, and can be present without positive CSF antibody. Since CSF antigen implies intrathecal seeding of the infection, the diagnosis of neurologic infection by B burgdorferi should not be excluded solely on the basis of normal routine CSF or negative CSF antibody analyses.
PMID: 7501150
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 1683022
Rapid and fatal neurologic deterioration due to central nervous system Candida infection in an HIV-1-infected child [Case Report]
McAbee, G; Ciminera, P; Knapik, M; Solitare, G; Belman, A; Dickson, D
PMID: 7499762
ISSN: 0883-0738
CID: 2154402
CEREBROSPINAL-FLUID MARKERS OF CNS INVASION IN EARLY LYME-DISEASE [Meeting Abstract]
COYLE, PK; KRUPP, LB; DENG, Z; BELMAN, AL; DATTWYLER, RJ; LUFT, BJ
ISI:A1995QT86900970
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 2233292
NORTH-AMERICAN LYME MENINGITIS [Meeting Abstract]
COYLE, PK; DATTWYLER, RJ; KRUPP, LB; BELMAN, AL; LUFT, BJ
ISI:A1995RN98500286
ISSN: 0364-5134
CID: 2233542
CEREBROSPINAL-FLUID FINDINGS IN CHILDREN WITH LYME DISEASE-RELATED FACIAL-NERVE PALSY [Meeting Abstract]
BELMAN, AL; REYNOLDS, L; COYLE, PK
ISI:A1995RU33300071
ISSN: 0364-5134
CID: 2236952
HIV-1-associated CNS disease in infants and children
Belman, A L
PMID: 8115719
ISSN: 0091-7443
CID: 2153772
IGG SUBCLASS DISTURBANCE IN TREATED LYME PATIENTS WITH PERSISTENT NEUROLOGIC SYMPTOMS [Meeting Abstract]
COYLE, PK; KRUPP, LB; DOSCHER, C; BELMAN, AL; MEHTA, PD
ISI:A1994NH01200230
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 2233782