The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), the etiological agent of
acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), directly affects the central
nervous system (CNS) and often causes cognitive, motor, and behavioral
changes and eventually a dementia prior to death. Suggestive evidence for
the early onset of HIV-induced mental changes is derived from numerous case
reports, the nature of subcortical CNS postmortem findings, and early
abnormalities seen in cerebrospinal fluid, on brain computed tomography,
magnetic resonance imaging, and electroencephalography, and on
neuropsychological tests administered to patients with AIDS and
AIDS-related complex. However, whether clinically significant cerebral
impairment can precede symptoms of immunosuppression is unclear. A few
studies have shown poorer performance on neuropsychological tests by
asymptomatic HIV-infected subjects compared with uninfected controls, but
several studies have not found this difference. To address this
controversy, the current literature is reviewed, methodological problems
are discussed, and recommendations are made for evaluation and treatment
when early HIV- induced mental changes are suspected.Abstract Teaser