Abstract

BackgroundWe set out to define the relative prevalence and common presentations of the various aetiologies of headache within an ambulant HIV-seropositive adult population in Kampala, Uganda.MethodsWe conducted a prospective study of adult HIV-1-seropositive ambulatory patients consecutively presenting with new onset headaches. Patients were classified as focal-febrile, focal-afebrile, non-focal-febrile or non-focal-afebrile, depending on presence or absence of fever and localizing neurological signs. Further management followed along a pre-defined diagnostic algorithm to an endpoint of a diagnosis. We assessed outcomes during four months of follow up.ResultsOne hundred and eighty patients were enrolled (72% women). Most subjects presented at WHO clinical stages III and IV of HIV disease, with a median Karnofsky performance rating of 70% (IQR 60-80).The most common diagnoses were cryptococcal meningitis (28%, n = 50) and bacterial sinusitis (31%, n = 56). Less frequent diagnoses included cerebral toxoplasmosis (4%, n = 7), and tuberculous meningitis (4%, n = 7). Thirty-two (18%) had other diagnoses (malaria, bacteraemia, etc.). No aetiology could be elucidated in 28 persons (15%). Overall mortality was 13.3% (24 of 180) after four months of follow up. Those without an established headache aetiology had good clinical outcomes, with only one death (4% mortality), and 86% were ambulatory at four months.ConclusionIn an African HIV-infected ambulatory population presenting with new onset headache, aetiology was found in at least 70%. Cryptococcal meningitis and sinusitis accounted for more than half of the cases.

Highlights

  • We set out to define the relative prevalence and common presentations of the various aetiologies of headache within an ambulant HIV-seropositive adult population in Kampala, Uganda

  • We excluded 86 subjects (31.5%) who did not meet the study inclusion criteria

  • Clinically severe headache with CD4 counts of below 200 cells/mm3 was more likely to be due to cryptococcal meningitis; for those with CD4 counts of above 200 cells/mm3, severe headache was

Read more

Summary

Introduction

We set out to define the relative prevalence and common presentations of the various aetiologies of headache within an ambulant HIV-seropositive adult population in Kampala, Uganda. In HIV-negative patients, the cause of headache is rarely secondary to significant intracranial pathology [13], but in HIV-positive patients, the risk of a secondary "serious" cause of headache is much higher, especially in those who are immunocompromised In this group, the frequency of "serious" aetiologies depends on the clinical setting, with frequencies ranging from 4% to 82% [4,5]. The primary diagnostic procedure for headache in HIVpositive subjects is neuroimaging [6], with some experts recommending computerized tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging in all HIV-positive patients with headache [7] This presents a unique challenge to the care of HIV-positive patients in sub-Saharan Africa, where access to diagnostic neuroradiologic expertise and equipment is severely limited [8,9].

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call