Peripheral neuropathy is a frequent cause of HIV morbidity. Chronic heavy alcohol use, which itself is one of the two most prevalent causes of peripheral neuropathy, is common in populations at high risk for HIV infection. Chronic heavy alcohol use may effect the Peripheral Nervous System (PNS) morbidity of HIV infection by accelerating the development of immunodeficiency (via biological effects or via effects on treatment seeking and treatment adherence behavior), through interactions between toxic effects or through nutritional deficiency. This project will determine the effects ( and mechanisms underlying these effects) of chronic heavy alcohol use on clinical and functional measures of the Peripheral Nervous System (PNS) morbidity of HIV disease in a 2-year longitudinal study of HIV+ and HIV- chronic heavy drinkers (HIV+HD) and light/non-drinkers (HIV+ L/ND). The Project will: (1) determine whether HIV+ HDs have greater PNS morbidity at baseline than HIV+ L/NDs, (2) determine whether they have a more rapid rate of progression of PNS morbidity than HIV+ L/NDs, (3) determine whether the effects of chronic heavy alcohol use and HIV infection of PNS morbidity at baseline and over the follow-up period are additive or exceed additive effects, and (4) test hypotheses concerning the mechanism(s) for interaction of chronic heavy alcohol use and HIV infection of PNS morbidity and its progression and on the impact of polyneuropathy on clinically important outcomes. Four groups will be studied: 120 HIV+ HDs, 120 HIV+ L/NDs, 60 HIV-HDs, and 60 HIV- L/NDs. PNS function will be measured by clinical exam, quantitative sensory testing, quantitative autonomic testing, and nerve conduction studies. Quantitative sensory deficits will be measured with thermal and vibratory detection thresholds. Quantitative autonomic testing will include heart rate variation to deep breathing and the Valsalva maneuver as well as postural blood pressure testing. Electrophysiological measures will include sensory and motor nerve conduction studies of bilateral lower and non-dominant upper limbs. The establishment of chronic heavy alcohol consumption as a significant co-factor in the pathogenesis of DSP would heighten awareness of health care providers and patients to the importance of this co-factor and would open new therapeutic windows.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA)
Type
Research Program Projects (P01)
Project #
1P01AA011493-01A1
Application #
6097734
Study Section
Project Start
1998-09-07
Project End
1999-08-31
Budget Start
1997-10-01
Budget End
1998-09-30
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
1998
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Northern California Institute Research & Education
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
San Francisco
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
94121
Cardenas, Valerie A; Durazzo, Timothy C; Gazdzinski, Stefan et al. (2011) Brain morphology at entry into treatment for alcohol dependence is related to relapse propensity. Biol Psychiatry 70:561-7
Van Boven, Robert W; Harrington, Greg S; Hackney, David B et al. (2009) Advances in neuroimaging of traumatic brain injury and posttraumatic stress disorder. J Rehabil Res Dev 46:717-57
Pa, Judy; Boxer, Adam; Chao, Linda L et al. (2009) Clinical-neuroimaging characteristics of dysexecutive mild cognitive impairment. Ann Neurol 65:414-23
Cardenas, V A; Meyerhoff, D J; Studholme, C et al. (2009) Evidence for ongoing brain injury in human immunodeficiency virus-positive patients treated with antiretroviral therapy. J Neurovirol 15:324-33
Studholme, Colin (2008) Dense feature deformation morphometry: Incorporating DTI data into conventional MRI morphometry. Med Image Anal 12:742-51
Gazdzinski, Stefan; Durazzo, Timothy C; Weiner, Michael W et al. (2008) Are treated alcoholics representative of the entire population with alcohol use disorders? A magnetic resonance study of brain injury. Alcohol 42:67-76
Gazdzinski, Stefan; Kornak, John; Weiner, Michael W et al. (2008) Body mass index and magnetic resonance markers of brain integrity in adults. Ann Neurol 63:652-7
Durazzo, Timothy C; Cardenas, Valerie A; Studholme, Colin et al. (2007) Non-treatment-seeking heavy drinkers: effects of chronic cigarette smoking on brain structure. Drug Alcohol Depend 87:76-82
Durazzo, Timothy C; Gazdzinski, Stefan; Meyerhoff, Dieter J (2007) The neurobiological and neurocognitive consequences of chronic cigarette smoking in alcohol use disorders. Alcohol Alcohol 42:174-85
Studholme, Colin (2007) Incorporating DTI data as a constraint in deformation tensor morphometry between T1 MR images. Inf Process Med Imaging 20:223-32

Showing the most recent 10 out of 23 publications