Wednesday 5 October 2016

S.African HIV Patients With Neuropathy Surprisingly Resilient

Today's post from sciencedaily.com (see link below) is a reminder to the editor of this blog that its core audience also needs to hear news related to their condition every now and then. The blog has become a general neuropathy blog because, as we so often say, the cause of neuropathy is actually not as important as the subsequent treatment and learning how to live with it. However, despite the advances in HIV treatment across the world, up to 50% of HIV patients also suffer from neuropathy as a side effect of the drugs, or the virus attacking the nervous system, or both. Experts still can't find an explanation as to why so many HIV patients end up with nerve damage. The article looks at how neuropathic pain may affect daily function and comes to some surprising conclusions. This story may remind expert neurologists that HIV is still a prevalent world-wide problem and therefore...neuropathy too.

Despite chronic pain, South Africans with HIV-related pain are surprisingly active
Date:September 13, 2016 Source:University of the Witwatersrand 


 Researchers measured chronic pain in HIV patients objectively for the first time

When one thinks about chronic conditions that are commonly painful, HIV doesn't typically spring to mind. However, more than 50% of HIV-positive individuals experience a painful condition like headache, chest pain or neuropathy, and that pain is frequently experienced as moderate to severe in intensity.

What struck researchers from the Brain Function Research Group (BFRG) at Wits University as odd was that despite this high burden of pain in HIV, a couple of papers have emerged suggesting that, having asked patients, functional interference (having difficulty with things like walking or going to work) was not as great as they might have expected. One of these papers was from the BFRG and had been completed locally in Johannesburg, South Africa.v

To investigate whether pain does actually affect function in HIV (as it does in many other clinical conditions), researchers Dr Antonia Wadley, Emeritus Professor Duncan Mitchell and Associate Professor Peter Kamerman from the BFRG, based in the School of Physiology, Faculty of Health Sciences at Wits, conducted a cross-sectional study.

The results from the study, titled "Resilience does not explain the dissociation between chronic pain and physical activity in South Africans living with HIV" are published in the journal PeerJ.

To explain why pain may not affect function, the researchers first put it down to African patients being resilient, i.e. the ability to cope with adversity.

Explains Wadley: "No one has assessed resilience in people living with HIV and chronic pain before. We hypothesised that people living with HIV would be generally be pretty resilient, and those who were more resilient would be more active and report lower pain intensity."

Measuring resilience in HIV-patients objectively for the first time


For the study, the researchers recruited HIV-positive patients from an HIV clinic in Johannesburg: half with chronic pain (defined as having had pain most days for at least three months) and half without. They then assessed resilience and, as well as asking patients about their activity, the researchers measured it objectively for the first time in a subset of patients using accelerometers, which are like sophisticated pedometers. They also asked the patients about their day-to-day worries.

"It turns out," Wadley says, "that we were right on one thing, HIV-positive patients in our study were really resilient, but our hypothesis was wrong: being more resilient did not associate with being more active or having lower pain intensity. In fact, the activity results astounded us. Not only was patients' activity not as affected as one might expect, it wasn't affected at all."

There was no difference in activity intensity, duration, or time spent at different intensities of activity between those with and without chronic pain. "This is something you just don't see in other types of long term pain," she adds.

The researchers then looked at how frequently patients worried about their health, money, food and family. "We thought that if patients were worried about money and having enough food, that pain might be relegated to a lower priority." They found that patients in chronic pain worried more frequently about each of these things compared to their pain-free counterparts and that health was lowest down the list.

"So it really does appear that if you are poor, pain may be relegated to a lower priority. Indeed, our analysis showed that worrying more about food associated with higher levels of activity," says Wadley.

Going forward

The researchers also asked the patients in pain what else they worried about and who they had told about their pain. "It turns out that HIV-related stigma is a real problem and that half the patients in pain had not told their closest friends and some not even their family about their pain, for fear that it might reveal their HIV status."

Wadley says it thus seems that economic stresses and fear of HIV-related stigma may drive people to maintain high levels of activity, even when they are in severe pain.

"What's not clear is whether this kind level of activity in the face of pain is helpful or harmful and that's something we will be looking into next," she adds.

Story Source:

Materials provided by University of the Witwatersrand. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.

Journal Reference:
Antonia L. Wadley, Duncan Mitchell, Peter R. Kamerman. Resilience does not explain the dissociation between chronic pain and physical activity in South Africans living with HIV. PeerJ, 2016; 4: e2464 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.2464


https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/09/160913095859.htm

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