Author:
CASTELLON STEVEN A.,HINKIN CHARLES H.,MYERS HECTOR F.
Abstract
Prominent apathy and/or irritability are frequently
observed among individuals infected with the human immunodeficiency
virus (HIV). Although these symptoms often occur as part
of a mood disorder, compelling evidence suggests that they
may occur independently of depression in neurologic disease/disorder.
The current study examined the prevalence of both apathy
and irritability among a sample of HIV-infected individuals
and explored the degree to which these neuropsychiatric
(NP) phenomena were associated with performance on neurocognitive
measures thought to be sensitive to the potential CNS effects
of HIV-1. Clinician-administered rating scales assessing
apathy and irritability were administered to 65 HIV-seropositive
(HIV+) and 21 HIV-seronegative (HIV−) participants
who also completed a dual-task reaction time paradigm and
the Stroop task. NP disturbance was significantly more
prevalent among HIV+ participants compared with HIV−
controls and was associated with specific neurocognitive
deficits suggestive of executive dysfunction. Relative
to both HIV− controls and to neuropsychiatrically
intact HIV+ participants, those HIV+ individuals with evidence
of prominent apathy and/or irritability showed deficits
in dual-task, but not single-task, performance and on the
interference condition of the Stroop. Unexpectedly, NP
disturbance did not show a robust relationship with HIV
disease stage. These results suggest that the presence
of prominent apathy and/or irritability among HIV+ individuals
may signify greater HIV-associated CNS involvement. In
HIV/AIDS, the disruption of frontal–subcortical circuits
may be a common mechanism causing both executive dysfunction
and NP disturbance. (JINS, 2000, 6, 336–347.)
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Neurology (clinical),Clinical Psychology,General Neuroscience
Cited by
67 articles.
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