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question everything Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-06-08 11:59 PM
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AIDS Patients Face Downside of Living Longer
The New York Times
January 6, 2008
AIDS Patients Face Downside of Living Longer
By JANE GROSS

CHICAGO — John Holloway received a diagnosis of AIDS nearly two decades ago, when the disease was a speedy death sentence and treatment a distant dream. Yet at 59 he is alive, thanks to a cocktail of drugs that changed the course of an epidemic. But with longevity has come a host of unexpected medical conditions, which challenge the prevailing view of AIDS as a manageable, chronic disease. Mr. Holloway, who lives in a housing complex designed for the frail elderly, suffers from complex health problems usually associated with advanced age: chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, diabetes, kidney failure, a bleeding ulcer, severe depression, rectal cancer and the lingering effects of a broken hip. Those illnesses, more severe than his 84-year-old father’s, are not what Mr. Holloway expected when lifesaving antiretroviral drugs became the standard of care in the mid-1990s.

The drugs gave Mr. Holloway back his future. But at what cost? That is the question, heretical to some, that is now being voiced by scientists, doctors and patients encountering a constellation of ailments showing up prematurely or in disproportionate numbers among the first wave of AIDS survivors to reach late middle age.

(snip)

Experts are coming to believe that the immune system and organs of long-term survivors took an irreversible beating before the advent of lifesaving drugs and that those very drugs then produced additional complications because of their toxicity — a one-two punch... The graying of the AIDS epidemic has increased interest in the connection between AIDS and cardiovascular disease, certain cancers, diabetes, osteoporosis and depression. The number of people 50 and older living with H.I.V., the virus that causes AIDS, has increased 77 percent from 2001 to 2005, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control, and they now represent more than a quarter of all cases in the United States.

(snip)

Those survivors, like Mr. Holloway, gaunt from chemotherapy and radiation and mostly housebound, lurch from crisis to crisis. Mr. Holloway says his adjustment strategy is simple: “Deal with it.” Still he notes, ruefully, that his father has no medical complaints other than arthritis, failing eyesight and slight hearing loss... Mr. Holloway is uncomplaining even in the face of pneumonia and a 40-pound weight loss, both associated with his cancer treatment. Has the cost been too high? He says it has not, “considering the alternatives.”

(snip)

Statins, for instance, which are the drug of choice for high cholesterol, are bad for people with abnormal liver function, also a greater risk among blacks. Many AIDS patients have end-stage liver disease, either from intravenous drug use or alcohol abuse. Among Dr. Starrett’s AIDS patients is 58-year-old Dominga Montanez, whose first husband died of AIDS and whose second husband is also infected. “My liver is acting up, my diabetes is out of control and I fractured my spine” because of osteoporosis, Ms. Montanez said. “To me, the new things are worse than the AIDS.”

(snip)

Larry Kramer, founder of several AIDS advocacy groups. 73 and a long-term survivor, said he had always suspected “it was only a matter of time before stuff like this happened” given the potency of the antiretroviral drugs. “How long will the human body be able to tolerate that constant bombardment?” he asked. “Well, we are now seeing that many bodies can’t. Once again, just as we thought we were out of the woods, sort of, we have good reason again to be really scared.”

(snip)


http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/06/health/06HIV.html?_r=1&oref=slogin
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Liberal Veteran Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-07-08 07:33 PM
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1. I think one thing that was missed about liver function in HIV patients...
...is the number of people who are co-infected with HCV. Nearly one-third of HIV patients also have to contend with Hepatitis C.

It's a tough road, to be sure. My triglycerides have risen steadily to the point I got put on Lipitor, but thankfully, I have it pretty good. I have tolerated the same drug combination for 8 years and my t-cells have risen well out of the danger zone.

Now I just have to sit back and hope that eventually there will be a cure before the drugs have an opportunity to cause long term effects.
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Maat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-07-08 07:57 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. You're in our thoughts and prayers, Liberal Veteran.
Hopefully, we will find a cure soon.
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