Abstract
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) causes an infection characterized by a wide spectrum of clinical manifestations, including musculoskeletal conditions that have been recognized with increasing frequency in recent years. Arthralgia, usually of moderate intensity, intermittent, and oligoarticular, is the most frequent rheumatic manifestation of HIV; it occurs in approximately 35% of the cases. Knees, shoulders, and elbows are the most frequently involved joints. A “painful articular syndrome,” characterized by severe articular or bone pain of short duration and absence of inflammation, can be observed in up to 10% of cases. Reiter's syndrome was the first rheumatological disorder recognized in association with HIV infection. The reported frequency has ranged from 0.5 to 9-9%. Most of the patients with this syndrome develop the incomplete form, and they usually are positive for human lymphocyte antigen B27. HIV-associated arthropathy has been observed by several groups. It is characterized by absence of recognizable rheumatic disease or syndrome, an oligoarticular pattern, and a subacute course. Psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis may flare up or develop in the course of an HIV infection and have been reported with increased prevalence in HIV patients. Psoriatic arthritis usually has a polyarticular and asymmetrical pattern. Several forms of myopathy have also been reported. Myalgia and a myopathy similar to polymyositis are the most frequent patterns observed. Two forms of the latter have been recognized, one attributed to HIV infection itself and the other to the use of zidovudine. Septic conditions in joint, bursa, bone, and muscle have rarely been described despite the immunodeficiency state. A Sjogren's syndrome-like disorder, termed “diffuse infiltrative lymphocyte syndrome,” may be seen in HIV patients, and it has many features that distinguish it from primary Sjögren's syndrome. Several types of vasculitis have been described; the necrotizing type is the most frequent type found. Fibromyalgia, hypertrophie osteo-arthropathy, and soft-tissue lesions have also been described. The pathogenetic mechanisms underlying the rheumatic manifestations of HIV infection are not well known. Their treatment is not well defined, but includes conventional antirheumatic therapy. Methotrexate and other immunosuppressive drugs should be used cautiously because they can precipitate the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome in an HIV-positive patient.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
