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Early central nervous system response to HIV infection

62

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1995

Year

Abstract

Asymptomatic HIV-positive patients with CD4+ counts > 400 x 10(6)/l demonstrate a statistically significant increase in slow-wave sleep during the latter portion of the night and less arousability. CD4+ lymphocyte count in the early phases of HIV infection appears to differentiate between various levels of HIV disease progression with respect to certain CNS measurements of nocturnal sleep and cognitive-motor performance. Sleep structure distortion remains one of the earliest and most consistently replicable physiological signs of HIV infection. This distortion may provide a link to immune function, disease progression, and cognitive-motor disability in HIV infection.