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International Journal of Health, Culture and Migration

Concerto per l'Etiopia

L'altra faccia di Gaia di Aldo Morrone

Dermatology of Human Mobile Populations

I SISTEMI SANITARI AFFRONTANO LA POVERTÀ

I colori della pelle

 

 
     

International Society of Dermatology - Palm Coast, FL - USA

   
San Gallicano Institute—IRCCS, Rome
Dep. of Preventive Medicine of Migration, Tourism and Tropical Dermatology

   

IISMAS
International Institute of Social, Medical and Anthropological Sciences - Rome

   
       
  First International Congress on    
  DERMATOLOGICAL CARE FOR ALL
“A BASIC HUMAN RIGHT”
   
       
 

Addis Ababa-Mekele (Ethiopia)
November 1 - 4, 2006
Italian Dermatological Hospital of Quihà - Tigray

   
       
       
 Abstracts SKIN LESIONS IN HIV/AIDS PATIENTS, OUR EXPERIENCE IN TIGRAY, ETHIOPIA    
       
  Author: Margherita Terranova, Valeska Padovese, Aldo Morrone
San Gallicano Dermatological Institute (IRCCS), Rome (Italy)
IISMAS- (International Institute of Social, Medical and
Anthropological Sciences)
   
       
       
 

ABSTRACT


Background: Sub-Saharan Africa, has the highest incidence of HIVAIDS infection in the world.
Lack of access to necessary antiretroviral therapy leads to the increased presence of advanced AIDS and severe pathological conditions related to the infection. The skin represents a sensible indicator of HIV infection and multiple skin disorder are part of the list established from WHO for the staging of HIV/AIDS
Patients and Methods: We report our experience at the Italian
Dermatological Centre (IDC) in Mekele, Tigray, the northernmost regional state in Ethiopia. The IDC is the only dermatological centre in a region counting more than 4 millions inhabitants. From January 2005 to September 2006, 659 HIV positive patients have been examined with related skin-disorders. Young women were more affected from HIV than males (399 females and 260 males). Commonest alterations we recorded included impetigo, dermatophytosis, viral warts and molluscum
contagiosus. Atypical clinical presentations (extensive distribution of the
skin lesions or presence of multiple infections in the same patient) represented HIV indicator. Papular Pruritic Eruption (PPE) represented an important role in the early detection of HIV infection and one of the most common symptoms encountered in patients with HIV. It is a not-infectious skin disorder, which involve not only the body but also the face, permitting in this way the immediate diagnosis of HIV infection. Investigations for STIs, according to the literature, showed high incidence in HIV patients and, in our experience, genital warts represented the commonest.
IISMAS, in collaboration with the Italian Cooperation-HSPD, Tigray Regional Health Bureau and Tigray Medical Association is leading an operational research (OR) to spread information about the strong relation between HIV infection and skin disorders. The aim of this project is to improve diagnosis and management skill of peripheral health workers on common skin condition related to HIV/AIDS.
Conclusions: Dermatological knowledge represents one of the fundamental clinical bases to diagnose HIV infection worldwide. We believe in the importance of spreading this dermatological skill to permit early detection and diagnosis of HIV infection. For this reason, as part of the OR, we are teaching dermatological discipline in multiple district of Tigray region. Early diagnosis represents one of the aims to decrease mortality HIV-related.

References

  1. Holmes CB, Losina E, Walensky RP, Yazdanpanah Y, Freedberg KA. Review of human immunodeficiency virus type 1-related opportunistic infections in sub-Saharan Africa. Clin Infect Dis. 2003 Mar 1;36(5):652-62.
    Epub 2003 Feb 17.
   
 Abstracts      
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   
       
       
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