Peripheral neuropathy
Article Abstract:
Peripheral neuropathy in HIV-infected patients may be difficult to treat. Peripheral neuropathies occur in about one-third of AIDS patients and can seriously interfere with quality of life. Non-AIDS related causes include vitamin B12 deficiency, diabetes mellitus, hypothyroidism, alcoholism, and many drugs. Treatment consists of treating underlying medical problems or discontinuing or lowering the dosage of the causative medication. Treatment of symptoms may include nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, amitriptyline, topical capsaicin cream, anticonvulsants, acupuncture, or narcotics.
Publication Name: The Nurse Practitioner
Subject: Health
ISSN: 0361-1817
Year: 1996
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
Clinical implications of alcoholism in patients with HIV/AIDS
Article Abstract:
Alcoholism can complicate the clinical management and therapeutic compliance of patients with HIV/AIDS. Chronic alcohol use can be immunosuppressive, and may accelerate the development of AIDS in HIV-infected patients. HIV/AIDS can produce dementia and other neurologic symptoms similar to mental impairments of alcohol abuse. HIV infection, antiretroviral drugs and long alcohol use all can produce peripheral neuropathies and liver disease. Alcoholics may have difficulty following complex drug treatment regimens critical to preventing the development of viral resistance in HIV/AIDS.
Publication Name: The Nurse Practitioner
Subject: Health
ISSN: 0361-1817
Year: 1997
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
Occupational transmission of HIV to health care workers
Article Abstract:
The risks of medical personnel contracting the HIV virus from patients is low but workers should be aware of the possibility and take necessary precautions. Variables influencing the risks of occupational transmission include the amount of virus in the contacted blood, the amount of blood accidentally injected, and the size of the needle. Medical personnel should use inatruments without needles whenever possible, use caution when handling sharp objects, and wear gloves.
Publication Name: The Nurse Practitioner
Subject: Health
ISSN: 0361-1817
Year: 1996
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
- Abstracts: Parenteral nutrition and in-line filtration. Feed the patient, fool the pancreas. Peripheral benefits
- Abstracts: Postmenopausal adnexal cysts: how clinical management has evolved. A comparison of methods for preoperative discrimination between malignant and benign adnexal masses: the development of a new logistic regression model
- Abstracts: "Doin' politics": linking policy and politics in nursing. The politics of advanced practice. Nursing's Agenda for Health Care Reform: policy, politics, and power through professional leadership
- Abstracts: Policy imperatives for nursing in an era of health care restructuring. Profession building in the new health care system
- Abstracts: Information is power. Are staffs prepared for the new information-based hospital enterprise? Changing World, Changing Systems: Why Managed Health Care Demands Information Technology