Difficulties in primary diagnosis of HIV infection at the stages of health care settings
Autor: | Sof’ya A. Semenova, Kseniya E. Novak, Thierry Ingabire, Aleksandra O. Nikiforova, E. V. Esaulenko |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Pediatrics
medicine.medical_specialty Sexual transmission business.industry 030231 tropical medicine Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) Primary care Disease medicine.disease_cause 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Polyclinic Epidemiology Health care Medicine 030212 general & internal medicine Medical diagnosis business |
Zdroj: | Epidemiology and Infectious Diseases. 25:11-17 |
ISSN: | 2411-3026 1560-9529 |
DOI: | 10.17816/eid35187 |
Popis: | Aim: to demonstrate the difficulties and timeliness of HIV diagnosis by primary care physicians, to carry out a clinical and epidemiological analysis of newly diagnosed cases of HIV infection. Materials and methods: The study evaluated the routing of diagnosis and analyzed the epidemiological and clinical and laboratory data of 85 patients with a newly diagnosed HIV infection hospitalized in the St. Petersburg Clinical Infectious Diseases Hospital named after S. P. Botkin during the period from November 2018 to October 2019. To confirm positive results, ELISA and western blot were used. Results: Among the observed patients, 71.3% were women and 28.7% were men. The average age was 39.3 2 years. Upon admission to the infectious diseases hospital with an established diagnosis of HIV infection, 49.5% were hospitalized in specialized departments (n = 42). Of them, nine (9) were referred by the polyclinic with an established diagnosis, in 20 patients the diagnosis was established in somatic hospitals, and emergency room doctors newly diagnosed HIV infection in 13 more patients. The remaining 50.5% (n = 43) were hospitalized in various departments with other diagnoses. Clinical and laboratory analysis of these patients showed that for the first time in life, an established diagnosis of HIV infection corresponded to both early (15.3%) and late (84.7%) stages of the disease with dominance of sexual transmission of the virus (43.6%). Conclusion: HIV infection at both early and late stages can manifest under the guise of various other diseases, which makes it necessary to expand testing of patients for HIV infection, including using rapid tests. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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