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CASE REPORTS
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Atherosclerosis and central adiposity in a pediatric patient with AIDS treated with HAART: autopsy findings.
Pediatric and Developmental Pathology 2006 November
Several types of cardiovascular lesions may develop in pediatric human immunodeficiency virus-positive (HIV+)/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) patients, namely myocarditis, dilated cardiomyopathy, pericardial effusion, pericarditis, left ventricle hypertrophy, fibrocalcific arteriopathy, and aneurysms. Additional lesions may be discovered by histological examination. These include fibrocalcific lesions in medium-sized arteries and small vessels, mainly of the heart and brain, and vasculitis. In the large arteries the vasa vasorum may present chronic inflammatory infiltrates or leukocytoclastic vasculitis, resulting in aneurysms. We are reporting the case of a 14-year-old girl with mother-to-infant HIV transmission with a long history of several central nervous system infections and AIDS dementia, who received treatment with the HAART protocol (including a protease inhibitor) for 3 years. A year after beginning this treatment, cholesterol serum levels were 2.8 g/L and 3.8 g/L. Autopsy findings showed gross and microscopic features of adult-type atherosclerosis involving the whole thoracic aorta, its main branches, and the coronary arteries. Remarkably, the abdominal aorta and all its branches were almost completely devoid of these lesions. At the same time, although the body presented extreme cachexia, there were obvious subepericardial, periadrenal, and peripancreatic fat deposits. The referred findings may have resulted from the well-known metabolic-dyslipemic syndrome induced by the HAART therapy and have not been specifically mentioned previously in the literature in the particular setting observed in the case of this patient.
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