|
|
Six patients with immunodepression (mean CD3+ cells = 86.2/mm; mean age = 34 years) developed distal motor weakness mimicking a monomelic amyotrophy that subacutely progressed regionally or assumed a symmetric distribution on more than one re gion. EMG was characteristic of motor neuron disease with no multifocal conduction block. Causes other than HIV-1 were ruled out. The unusual rapid extension of the disease and the positive response to antiretroviral therapy suggest that ALS syndrome and HIV infection are etiologically related. HIV-1 might cause an ALS-like disorder by several mechanisms - via neuronal infection, by secretion of toxic viral substance, by inducing the immune system to secrete cytokines, or by inducing an autoimmune disease . These cases suggest that the association between some motor neuron diseases and HIV infection is not coincidental but pathogenetically related and that ALS-like disorder should be considered an HIV-related neurologic complication. |
|