HIV patients face increased stroke risk

PEOPLE with HIV are three times as likely to suffer strokes, said a study out today that has led researchers to question if antiretroviral drugs could be to blame.

Among people living in theUS with the virus that causes AIDS, stroke hospitalisation rose 67 per cent over the past decade, while in the general population they fell seven per cent, said the study in the journal Neurology.

Researchers examined all strokes which required a hospital visit in the US over the past 10 years and found that the total declined over the course of the decade with 71,742 fewer strokes overall.

But among people with HIV, 537 more strokes were tabulated in the same time period.

People with HIV showed an increase in a certain kind of stroke, called ischemic, which is caused by blood clots to the brain. Ischemic strokes are the most common type.

“The average age for a stroke among people with HIV was in the 50s, which is much lower than that of those without HIV,” said Bruce Ovbiagele, professor of neurosciences at the University of California, San Diego.

“This finding suggests that HIV or HIV treatments may be directly related to stroke occurrence.”

The World Health Organisation says antiretroviral therapy has resulted in “huge reductions” in death rates among HIV sufferers, though people in poorer countries often cannot afford the drug regimens.

Of the total 33.3 million people living with HIV in the world, at least 14.6 million were in need of antiretroviral therapy in 2009, said WHO and UNAIDS.

“While these therapies have greatly increased life expectancy, they may boost the presence of risk factors associated with stroke,” said Professor Ovbiagele.

“Another possibility is that longer exposure to HIV as a result of greater survival, even at low viral load levels, may allow for the virus to increase stroke risk.”

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