Vol. 35 No. 5 (2018): October
Clinical Case

Clinical utility of HIV viral load assessment in cerebral spinal fluid, a case report

Catalina Gutiérrez
Hospital San Juan de Dios
Leonardo Chanqueo
Hospital San Juan de Dios
Fernando Bernal
Hospital San Juan de Dios
Alejandro Ramírez
Hospital San Juan de Dios
Oscar Loureiro
Hospital San Juan de Dios
Patricia Vásquez
Hospital San Juan de Dios

Published 2018-11-25

How to Cite

1.
Gutiérrez C, Chanqueo L, Bernal F, Ramírez A, Loureiro O, Vásquez P. Clinical utility of HIV viral load assessment in cerebral spinal fluid, a case report. Rev. Chilena. Infectol. [Internet]. 2018 Nov. 25 [cited 2026 Jan. 13];35(5). Available from: https://revinf.cl/index.php/revinf/article/view/261

Abstract

Detection of virus in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in HIV-infected patients with HIV viral load (VL) undetectable in plasma has been termed viral escape. These leaks may be asymptomatic from a neurological point of view, similar to plasma blips, or associated with neurological disease, with discordant VL between plasma and CSF, and may be evidence of a compartmentalization of the virus and the possibility of identifying quasispecies with mutations that confer resistance to ART. We present the case of a man with AIDS and disseminated tuberculosis who presented neurological symptomatology evidenced by headache and convulsive syndrome, who presented a discordance between plasma and CSF HIV VL; the genotypic test of the virus, obtained by lumbar puncture, identified new mutations that determined a change in ART with subsequent satisfactory evolution.