Management of HIV Vasculopathy – A South African Experience☆
Received 23 December 2009; accepted 27 December 2009. published online 02 March 2010.
Abstract
The aim of the study was to describe the presentation management and short term results of therapy (< 1 month) in patients admitted with HIV vasculopathy.
Records were culled from a prospectively maintained data base on the Vascular Unit at Inkosi Albert Luthuli Hospital, Durban, South Africa between January 2005 and June 2009.
226 patients were studied; 111 had aneurysms and 115 occlusive disease. 98% were African and ages ranged from 4–53 years (average 36); 90% were male. The CD4 count ranged from 1–930 cells/mm3 while serum albumin averaged 30 mMol/L.
202 aneurysm presented in 111 participants; commonest sites were superficial femoral artery (40%) and carotid (25%). 82 patients had standard operative repair and 8 had stent grafts; 29 were not treated due to advanced disease.
Within 30 days of operation the mortality was 9% with 5% developing graft sepsis and 11% pulmonary complications.
Of 115 with occlusive disease, there were 2 distinct groups. 51 had no previous claudication and had acute thrombosis; no thrombophilia could be demonstrated. 64 had premature atherosclerotic disease. The majority presented with critical ischaemia.
In the acute thrombosis group 15 (29%) had primary amputation, limb salvage was achieved in 13 (36%) and 4 died (11%). In the chronic occlusive group 30 (47%) had primary amputation, of 25 submitted to surgery limb salvage was achieved in 17 (68%).
Low CD4 count and albumen levels did not correlate with mortality or complications.
Conclusion
Surgical therapy for aneurysm is worthwhile in the short term.
Following occlusive disease there is a 25% overall salvage rate in the short term (< 1/12) but the long term outlook is uncertain.