J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci. 1990 Summer;2(3):256-60. Unique
The encephalopathy associated with direct nervous system infection by
the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) has been recognized as one of the
major debilitating aspects of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome
(AIDS) and of pre-AIDS conditions. A comprehensive neuropsychological
examination of symptomatic HIV-infected subjects without opportunistic
cerebral disease demonstrated a distinctive pattern of cognitive
deficits marked by prominent attentional impairment. Evidence of
organizational and reasoning impairments also was observed, but
language, visual-spatial, and memory consolidation abilities were
relatively preserved. The findings suggest a profile of impairment
similar to other cognitive syndromes involving dysfunction of
predominantly anterior brain structures and projections and suggest a
rationale for psychostimulant drug treatment.
Adult Attention AIDS Dementia Complex/*DIAGNOSIS/PSYCHOLOGY
Bisexuality/PSYCHOLOGY Cognition Disorders/*DIAGNOSIS/PSYCHOLOGY
Homosexuality/PSYCHOLOGY Human Male *Neuropsychological Tests
Orientation Psychomotor Performance Recall JOURNAL ARTICLE
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