HIV infection and chronic drinking have a synergistic, damaging effect on the brain

Jul 23, 2009

More than half of clinic patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) report they also drink heavily. While highly active antiretroviral therapy has helped to reduce HIV-related cognitive and motor deficits, neuropsychological deficits may continue and even be exacerbated by alcohol. A study of memory deficits has found that HIV infection and chronic alcoholism have synergistic, damaging effects on brain function.

Results will be published in the October issue of Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research and are currently available at Early View.

"It has been consistently documented that chronic heavy drinking results in cognitive and motor deficits, particularly impairments in component processes of executive functions, memory, visuospatial abilities, and speed of cognitive processing and motor movements," said Edith V. Sullivan, professor in the department of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Stanford University School of Medicine and corresponding author for the study. "Chronic heavy drinking co-occurring with is highly prevalent, and the separate and combined untoward effects on the brain and its processes can be significant and disruptive of activities of daily living."

This prevalence exists despite considerable educational and prevention programs regarding both HIV and alcoholism, added Sara Jo Nixon, a professor in the department of psychiatry at the University of Florida. "Furthermore, their comorbidity constitutes an even greater health concern with implications for treatment adherence, work and interpersonal skill maintenance."

Sullivan and her colleagues examined working and episodic memory in four groups (n=164) - 40 individuals with HIV (28 men, 12 women), 38 with chronic alcoholism (24 men, 14 women), 47 with both HIV and chronic alcoholism (38 men; 9 women), and 39 "normal" controls (22 men, 17 women) - at baseline and then again at a one-year follow-up. Measures included accuracy scores, response times, and rate of information processing.

"Individuals who are both positive for HIV and have a history of chronic heavy drinking are at greater risk than individuals with only one of these conditions to have trouble learning new information," said Sullivan. "This difficulty in new learning can affect an individual's ability to use information important to the successful completion of personal and work-related activities."

"Too frequently, when widespread deficits are associated with disease, the need to disentangle underlying interacting processes is overlooked," said Nixon. "Specifically, Sullivan and her colleagues' ability to identify a particular component of memory, 'episodic,' as being impaired, while another, 'working,' is spared supports the continued to need construct studies which provide explicit contrasts among subprocesses which may be inappropriately grouped under a broad superordinate category." In other words, she said, specific damages were "cloaked" by overall damage prior to this study.

"Immediate episodic memory is dependent on intact medial temporal lobe systems that have been shown to be affected in both HIV infection and chronic alcoholism," explained Sullivan, "whereas working memory is primarily associated with more frontally based systems that may not be as severely effected at this moderate stage of disease. Results showed that individuals were able to retain information over time, which suggests that retrieval of information was intact, whereas lower scores on immediate memory suggested that difficulties were associated with ability to learn, or encode, information."

"The immediate real-world and clinical impact of this study is considerable," observed Nixon. "The data suggest that specific interventions for enhancing the process of encoding or learning new information, such as prescription regimens, should be employed to enhance treatment outcomes as well as work and interpersonal situations. If individuals are aware and engage in 'encoding-rich' strategies, overall quality of life and adaptation may be enhanced."

Nixon also noted that questions have been raised regarding the impact of anti-retrovirals on the brain. "While these medications can effectively control obvious markers of , indirect measures on neurocognitive function are less clear," she said. "There is a need to examine this behavioral/biochemical dissociation."

Source: Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research

Explore further: Fecal microbiota tx feasible for recurrent C. difficile in HIV

add to favorites email to friend print save as pdf

Related Stories

Individuals with HIV have higher risk of non-AIDS cancers

Nov 18, 2008

The risk of non-AIDS cancer is higher for individuals infected with HIV than for the general population, according to a meta-analysis presented here at the American Association for Cancer Research's Seventh Annual International ...

Early HIV treatment fails to restore memory T cells

Dec 05, 2006

Most of the body’s memory T cells vanish within weeks after a person is infected with the HIV virus. In a study from the Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Center and the Bernard-Nocht Institute appearing in the international ...

HIV is a 'double hit' to the brain

Aug 15, 2007

New evidence reported in the August issue of Cell Stem Cell, a publication of Cell Press, offers a novel perspective on how the HIV/AIDS virus leads to learning and memory deficits, a condition known as HIV-associated dement ...

Recommended for you

Canada lifts ban on gay men donating blood

20 hours ago

Canadian health authorities lifted Wednesday what was effectively a ban on gay men giving blood, announcing new rules making men who have not had sex with men in the past five years eligible.

Integrating mental health care into HIV care

May 21, 2013

The integration of mental health interventions into HIV prevention and treatment platforms can reduce the opportunity costs of care and improve treatment outcomes, argues a new Policy Forum article published in this week's ...

After a decade, global AIDS program looks ahead

May 21, 2013

(AP)—The decade-old law that transformed the battle against HIV and AIDS in developing countries is at a crossroads. The dream of future generations freed from the epidemic is running up against an era ...

User comments : 0

More news stories

The secret lives, and deaths, of neurons

As the human body fine-tunes its neurological wiring, nerve cells often must fix a faulty connection by amputating an axon—the "business end" of the neuron that sends electrical impulses to tissues or other ...

Breakthrough on Huntington's disease

Researchers at Lund University have succeeded in preventing very early symptoms of Huntington's disease, depression and anxiety, by deactivating the mutated huntingtin protein in the brains of mice.

A hidden population of exotic neutron stars

(Phys.org) —Magnetars – the dense remains of dead stars that erupt sporadically with bursts of high-energy radiation - are some of the most extreme objects known in the Universe. A major campaign using ...

White tiger mystery solved

White tigers today are only seen in zoos, but they belong in nature, say researchers reporting new evidence about what makes those tigers white. Their spectacular white coats are produced by a single change ...

Unspooling DNA from nucleosomal disks

The tight wrapping of genomic DNA around nucleosomes in the cell nucleus makes it unavailable for gene expression. A team of Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitaet (LMU) in Munich now describes a mechanism that allows chromosomal ...