Asymptomatic oral carriage of Candida species in HIV-infected patients in the highly active antiretroviral therapy era


Autoria(s): Costa,Carolina Rodrigues; Cohen,Ana Joaquina; Fernandes,Orionalda Fátima Lisboa; Miranda,Karla Carvalho; Passos,Xisto Sena; Souza,Lúcia Kioko Hasimoto; Silva,Maria do Rosário Rodrigues
Data(s)

01/10/2006

Resumo

Oropharyngeal candidiasis is the most common opportunistic fungal infection in individuals infected with human immunodeficiency virus. CD4+ lymphocytes count and the quantification of viral RNA in blood plasma have been found to be the main markers of HIV disease progression. The present study was conducted to evaluate Candida sp. diversity in the oral cavity of HIV-infected patients and to determine whether there was association of CD4+ cell count and viral load with asymptomatic oral Candida carriage. Out of 99 HIV-positive patients studied, 62 (62.6%) had positive culture for Candida (oral carriage) and 37 patients (37.4%) had Candida negative culture (no oral carriage). The etiologic agents most common were C. albicans and C. tropicalis. The range of CD4+ was 6-2305 cells/mm³ in colonized patients and 3-839 cells/mm³ for non-colonized patients, while the viral load was 60-90016 copies/mL for colonized patients and 75-110488 copies/mL for non colonized patients. The viral load was undetectable in 15 colonized patients and in 12 non colonized patients. Our results showed that there was no significant difference of the variables CD4+ cell count and viral load between oral candida carriage and no oral candida carriage patients.

Formato

text/html

Identificador

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0036-46652006000500004

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

Instituto de Medicina Tropical

Fonte

Revista do Instituto de Medicina Tropical de São Paulo v.48 n.5 2006

Palavras-Chave #Oral Candida #CD4+ cells #Viral load #HIV
Tipo

journal article