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    Clinical Chemistry Profiles In Injection Heroin Users From Coastal Region, Kenya.

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    Date
    2014-07
    Author
    Were, T
    Wesongah, JO
    Ouma, C
    Munde, E
    Kahiga, TM
    Ongecha-Owuor, F
    Kiarie, JN
    Ahmed, AA
    Makokha, EP
    Budambula, V.
    Type
    Article; en_US
    Language
    en
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    Abstract
    Background Although the co-burden of injection drug use and HIV is increasing in Africa, little is known about the laboratory markers of injection drug use and anti-retroviral treatment (ART) in Kenyan injection drug users. This study, therefore, aimed at determining the clinical chemistry profiles and identifying the key laboratory markers of HIV infection during ART in injection heroin users (IHUs). Methods Clinical chemistry measurements were performed on serum samples collected from HIV-1 infected ART-experienced (n = 22), naive (n = 16) and HIV-1 negative (n = 23) IHUs, and healthy controls (n = 15) from Mombasa, coastal Kenya. Results HIV uninfected IHUs had lower alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels (P = 0.023) as ART-exposed IHUs exhibited lower albumin (P = 0.014) and higher AST to platelet index (APRI) (P < 0.0001). All IHUs presented with lower aspartate aminotransferase to ALT values (P = 0.001) and higher C-reactive protein (CRP) levels (P = 0.002). ART-naive IHUs had higher globulin levels (P = 0.013) while ART-experienced and naive IHUs had higher albumin to total protein (P < 0.0001) and albumin to globulin (P < 0.0001) values. In addition, CD4+ T cells correlated with ALT (ρ = −0.522, P = 0.011) and CRP (rho, ρ = 0.529, P = 0.011) in HIV negative and ART-experienced IHUs, respectively. HIV-1 viral load correlated with albumin to globulin index in ART-experienced (ρ = −0.468, P = 0.037) and naive (ρ = −0.554, P = 0.040) IHUs; and with albumin to total protein index (ρ = −0.554, P = 0.040) and globulin (ρ = 0.570, P = 0.033) in ART-naive IHUs. Conclusion Absolute ALT, albumin, globulin, and CRP measurements in combination with APRI, AST to ALT, albumin to total protein and albumin to globulin indices may be useful laboratory markers for screening IHUs for initiating and monitoring treatment
    URI
    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25057262
    http://hdl.handle.net/11295/73414
    Citation
    BMC Clin Pathol. 2014 Jul 9;14:32. doi: 10.1186/1472-6890-14-32.
    Publisher
    University of Nairobi
    Subject
    Injection heroin user, Clinical chemistry markers, HIV-1 infection, Anti-retroviral treatment
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    • Biomed Full Text Articles [201]

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