HIV: PROBLEMS AFFECTING THE WHOLE BODY-FEVER

July 22nd, 2011

Symptoms that affect the whole body, or constitution, are called constitutional symptoms. Constitutional symptoms include fever, night sweats, weight loss, fatigue, lethargy, and malaise. All these symptoms are relatively common both in the general population and in people with HIV infection. People with HIV infection tend to have constitutional symptoms when the CD4 count is low, unless the people are also depressed or have some unrelated medical problem like influenza. Some of these symptoms—fatigue, lethargy, malaise—are subjective and difficult to measure. Others—fever, severe weight loss (wasting)—are more objective.     Fever-Physicians always want to know when a person with HIV infection has a fever: fever is an objective indication of a problem that is not just a day-to-day variation in health status. Fever, especially prolonged fever in people with low CD4 counts, is usually the result of infections. In people with HIV infection, the infections that are most likely are tuberculosis, sinusitis,    Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare infection, cytomegalovirus infection, fungal infection, Pneumocystis pneumonia, and lymphoma.     Most people with fever are aware of it. They cannot tolerate the usual range of heat and cold that most people consider normal room temperature; they have chills and sweats. In people with HIV infection, fevers often begin gradually, occurring off and on for extended periods of weeks or months. The fever is often accompanied by sweating at night, called night sweats, that may be severe enough to require changes in pajamas and sheets.     It is important to measure the fever. The body temperature that is normal differs for different people and at different times of the day. The average temperature is 97 degrees F at 3:00 A.M. and 99.3 degrees F at 5:00 P.M. In general, temperatures are about two degrees higher (on the  Fahrenheit scale) in the late afternoon than they are in the morning. A fever usually exaggerates this daily variation, and the highest temperatures usually come after 6:00 P.M. For this reason, people with HIV infection who think they have a fever should take their temperatures several times during the day, when they feel feverish, and in the late afternoon. Although there is no general agreement on the precise definition of fever, most physicians consider 99.6 degrees F or 100 degrees F to be a fever. (Temperature is measured on two scales: the Fahrenheit, or F scale, commonly used in the United States, and the centigrade, or C scale, used in the rest of the world and in some hospitals in the United States. A temperature of 98.6 degrees F corresponds to 37 degrees C.)     Fever is basically treated by treating whatever is causing it. Treating fever itself is a little controversial. Fever actually has advantages: the immune system works better at higher temperatures, and fever is an important indicator of the course of the disease and of the effectiveness of treatment. But fever is also unpleasant for the person who has it and increases the metabolic rate, burning more calories and making good nutrition more difficult. Otherwise, there is little evidence that fever is harmful.     When the decision is made to reduce fever, the usual drugs are aspirin or acetaminophen. The fever decreases or disappears when people take one of these drugs, but returns when the effect of the drug wears off. For people with persistent fever, these fluctuations in temperature can be more unpleasant than a steady, if high, temperature. For this reason, people with persistent fevers are often advised to take these drugs regularly, every four to six hours, without waiting for the fever to recur.*136\191\2*

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HIV INFECTION AND ITS EFFECTS ON INTERPERSONAL RELATIONS: FEELINGS ABOUT SEX-SOLVING THE PROBLEMS

April 16th, 2011

Some people react to these feelings, as Alan did for a while, by becoming celibate, not having sex at all. Celibacy is one solution. If you are uncomfortable having sex, or if you feel no desire to, don’t bother with it. Many find sexual release in masturbation.     After a while, many people adjust to safer sex. “The way I’ve adjusted to safer sex,” says Alan, “is by psyching myself into thinking I prefer it. It wasn’t easy, but I did it, and now I can’t not practice safer sex, even if my partner wants to do it differently. I can’t ejaculate inside someone any more.”     Lisa and her husband also worked out a mutually satisfying solution: “The virus was pretty hard on our sexual relationship. Oral sex had been an important part of our lives. I tried oral sex with him while he was wearing a condom, but it tasted too bad. We ended up having sex with him wearing a condom, and with mutual masturbation. It was satisfying enough.”     Some people set limits on sex. Dean and his partner had sex less often. That made Dean feel guilty, but his partner said, “I can handle that better than he can. I look at him and he looks so tired.” Some couples have sex quickly, and say that is better than nothing. Some couples in which only one person is infected give control to the uninfected person to determine how often they make love and what happens during love-making.     One good solution is to accept the necessary changes in sexual practices, and where those changes are less than satisfying find other ways to accomplish the same intimacy, reassurance, comfort, and bonding. “Sex always created a bonding between me and my husband,” Lisa said. “Safer sex could do that too. But I also tried to re-create that bond by doing more things together and having more communication.” Dean said the same thing: “We gave up having sex and make love now.” All kinds of physical intimacies that are not sexual can also create bonding: holding hands, touching, giving baths, giving massages, combing hair, napping together, taking showers together, playing card games, lying in bed together, sitting together to read the morning paper or to watch TV or to listen to music, sitting together and reading aloud to each other. Lisa found that her husband responded as she had hoped: “My husband had always had a fear of intimacy. I saw that dissolve. He told me things he never had before. It took time and love to overcome the fear and guilt.”
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