HIV CASE 36 ANDREA SIGRIST PATIENT Client • Terry Long • Sex: Male • Ethnicity: African American • DOB: 5/12 • Age: 32 • Height: 6’1” • Weight: 151 lbs Reason for Admittance • HIV positive (diagnosed 4 years ago) • Exhausted all the time • Sore mouth • Sore throat • Significant weight loss • Possible pneumonia per referring physician Patient History Stereopositive for HIV-1, confirmed by ELISA and Western Blot 4 years ago Unknown contraction Not currently undergoing treatment Tonsillectomy at age 6 Appendectomy at age 18 Current medications; multivitamin, vitamin E, vitamin C, ginseng, milk thistle, echinacea Quit smoking 5 years ago Family history: father with angina, heart problems, high blood pressure (CAD, HTN) Physical Exam General Appearance: Thin African American in no acute distress Vitals: Temp 98.6F, BP 120/84, HR 92bpm, RR 18bpm Heart: regular rate and rhythm Nose: Mucosa pink without drainage Throat: erythematous with white, patchy exudate Extremities: good pulses, no edema Skin: warm, with flaky patches Chest/lungs: Rhonchi in lower left lung Abdomen: nondistended, nontender, hyperactive bowel sounds LAB VALUES Measure Normal Value Terry’s Value Reason for Concern Albumin 3.6 – 5 3.6 Low levels are a sign of malnutrition Prealbumin 19 – 43 6.0 Low levels are a sign of malnutrition Transferrin 200 – 400 17 Low levels are a sign of malnutrition Viral Load 0 29000 Elevated levels are a sign of an immune disorder CD4 325 – 997 157 < 200 defines AIDS BUN 8 – 26 11 Low levels are a sign of malnutrition PATIENT DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT DIAGNOSIS • HIV for four years • AIDS • Clinical Cate • Oral thrush • No clinical evidence of pneumonia TREATMENT • Antiretroviral regimen • AZT (zidovudine) 200 mg every 8hr • Crixivan (indinavir) 800mg every 8hr • 3TC Epivir (lamivudine) 150 mg every 12hr WHAT IS HIV? • Infection caused by the human immunodeficiency virus which destroys the immune system and makes it hard for the body to fight off infections • Transmitted through sexual contact, blood, and mother to child • People infected may not show symptoms for up to ten years, but can still infect others • Progresses to AIDS • There is no cure, but it can be treated • People infected with HIV will develop AIDS if not treated • A small amount of people develop AIDS slowly or not at all • Is a preventable infection HIV TESTS Western Blot ELISA • Uses gel electrophoresis to separate specific HIV proteins being detected • After separation, the proteins are transferred to a membrane to be identified using antibodies that target a specific protein • HIV antigens are added to a sample of blood and antibodies react with the HIV virus • An enzyme linked to an antibody is added and reacts with the HIV antigen/antibody • A catalyst is added to change the color of the enzyme-linked complex RISK FACTORS FOR CONTRACTING HIV Common Risk Factors • Sexual contact with an infected person • Unprotected sex • Coming in contact with blood of an infected person • Sharing needles • Blood transfusions • Mother to child by blood during delivery or breast milk Terry’s Risk Factors • Worked as a nurse in a dialysis clinic • Numerous sexual partners • Use of recreational drugs PROGNOSIS • HIV is a chronic condition • It will eventually completely destroy a person’s immune system • Progression depends on each individual • There are treatment options, but no cure • Can prevent complications and delay the progression of AIDS • Almost all people infected will develop AIDS • Lack of treatment is fatal • HAART (highly reactive antiretroviral therapy) dramatically increases how long an infected person lives, but is not a cure • The weakened immune system makes individuals more susceptible to infections and cancers TREATMENT FOR HIV Treatment When to Start • Medications used in combination is the only way to control the virus • It is best to use three different medications from two different classes of drugs to avoid creating strains of HIV that are immune to single drugs • Symptoms become severe • CD4 count is below 500 • Become pregnant • Have HIV-related kidney disease • Being treated for HepC MEDICATIONS Types of Medications • NNRTIs (Non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors): disables proteins HIV needs to copy itself • NRTIs (Nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors): faulty versions of building blocks HIV needs to copy itself • PIs (Protease Inhibitors): disable protease , which HIV uses to copy itself • Entry or fusion inhibitors: block HIV’s entry into CD4 cells • Integrase inhibitors: disables integrase which HIV uses to insert genetic material into CD4 cells Terry’s Medications • 200 mg of zidovudine (AZT) every 8 hours • 800 mg of indinavir (Crixivan) every 8 hours • 150 mg of lamivudine (3TC Epivir) every 12 hours SUPPLEMENTS Supplement Proposed use in HIV/AIDS Potential Risk Vitamin C Improve antioxidant capacity, increases iron absorption from non-heme sources Increases urinary losses of oxalate and calcium Vitamin E Vitamin E may protect against toxicity and side effects from AZT (antiretroviral medications) Can interfere with blood clotting. Cause nausea, diarrhea, muscle weakness, fatigue Ginseng Has anti-stress and anti-fatigue effects; May contain a protein with anti-HIV activity morning diarrhea, insomnia, nervousness, depression, confusion, skin rashes and high blood pressure Milk thistle May prevent liver damage caused by HIV medications Anticancer, immunostimulatory; stimulate immune system and promote CD4 cell activation Upset stomach, diarrhea, bloating, gas May inhibit metabolism of drugs using the cytochrome P 450 enzyme pathway Slows disease progression, increases CD4 count, lowers viral load values None Echinacea Multivitamin NUTRITION WITH HIV Terry’s Diet before Mouth Sores Suggested HIV Nutrition • Breakfast/Lunch: 1-2 cups of cold cereal with ½ cup of whole milk • Dinner: Meat, potatoes or rice, tea or soda • Snacks: Pizza, candy bar, or cookies with tea or soda • 1-2 beers or glasses of wine several times a week • Consume a healthy and balanced diet like healthy individuals Terry’s 24-hour Diet Recall Sips of apple juice, 1 cup of yogurt, 1 cup of rice and gravy, sips of iced tea with sugar throughout the day • Calories should be 10% higher if untreated • Calories should be 30% higher during recovery • Take a daily multivitamin • If suffering from loss of appetite: • Eat several small meals • Exercise to stimulate appetite • Consume nutrition supplement beverage ALCOHOL AND HIV • Studies show regular alcohol consumption is associated with an increase in the progression of HIV • The immunosuppressive effects of alcohol may cause CD4 count to fall below 200 cells • Still being researched, not a fact MAIN CONCERNS FOR TERRY Problems Suggestions • Not eating enough • Consumes a lot of sugar and soda • Alcohol consumption • Not taking medications • Place on pureed or soft food diet • Add nutritional supplement beverage • Vegetable juices • Soy or almond milks • Educate about programs that help pay for medications GOALS • Main goal is to get Terry his medications and get him taking them every day as directed • Educate about healthy diet and consequences of malnutrition and not taking medications • Get back on a normal diet • Start exercise routine COURSE OF ACTION • Have him meet with a Medication Assistance program • Create diet plan • Begin with soft/liquid diet • Progress to normal diet • Have Terry keep a food journal • Join a gym or fitness group • Join a support group QUESTIONS? 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