Central Nervous System Side Effects from HIV Treatment
One class of HIV medicines has been associated
with problems related to the central nervous system. Side effects include
vivid dreams and sleep problems. Learn how to manage these side effects.
Participants:
Graeme Moyle, MBBS, MD
Associate Director of HIV Research, Chelsea and Westminster Hospital
Peter Reiss, MD, PhD
Associate Professor of Medicine, University of Amsterdam
Webcast Transcript
ANNOUNCER: HIV medications have a wide range
of side effects. Ones that affect the central nervous system can be
especially disturbing.
WINSTON BATCHELOR: I've had weird dreams
where I'm being chased by zombies. I've saving Captain Kirk and Spock from
the Borg and I get assimilated and I die. All these weird things where I'm
losing the battle, not winning the battle. So that's kind of, to me, the
very scary thing.
ANNOUNCER: Winston Batchelor is 34 years
old. He's been HIV positive since he was 19. Winston has been on
antiretroviral therapy for seven years, and over that period, various drugs
have made him feel nauseous, exhausted and lightheaded. When Winston
switched regimens, and went on Sustiva in 1998, he experienced the strange
dreams.
GRAEME MOYLE, MD: The most common thing that
comes on with the first dose of medication and then tends to fade over the
course of the next two or three weeks are sleep disturbances where people
get more vivid dreams or remember their dreams more clearly over the course
of the evening.
ANNOUNCER:
Sustiva is a commonly-used
anti-HIV drug, in a class of medications called non-nucleoside reverse
transcriptase inhibitors.
There are reports that other drugs in this class have also caused central
nervous system side effects. But they're more common with Sustiva.
As they should with any drug, doctors discuss
Sustiva's side effects,
especially sleep disturbances, with their patients.
PETER REISS, MD: It's common in patients who
you put on efavirenz. But in the majority of patients, it's transient. So
it's something that you need to forewarn them about. You need to tell them
before you put them on that this may appear. This is what it may look like,
that they shouldn't be surprised, that they shouldn't get scared and try to
talk them through.
ANNOUNCER: Sleep disturbances are not the
only central nervous system side effects with Sustiva.
GRAEME MOYLE, MD: Some people feel that they
have a dizziness where they've not really got the spins, but they just feel
as though they're a little perhaps intoxicated by the medication.
ANNOUNCER: That's exactly how Winston felt
the first time he took the drug.
WINSTON BATCHELOR: About an hour, hour and a
half later, I got up out of the chair and it was like someone had drugged or
given me a bottle of wine. I felt so inebriated, I just fell back into the
chair and my world started spinning and everything started moving.
HealthyPlace.com Audio
Attempting
Suicide and Coping with Suicidal Thoughts
What would drive someone to actually try and
kill themselves? For years, our guest, Melanie, was told she was worthless,
lazy, crazy, and would never amount to anything. She and other callers share
their stories of suicide attempts and how they feel about surviving. Dr. Kumar
provides insight into psychological aspects of suicide.
Listen with
Real Player. |
|
|
ANNOUNCER: Other, less common, side effects
with some of the non-nucleoside medicines include headache, impaired
concentration, and
depression. To help patients manage the side effects
associated with Sustiva, doctors prescribe taking the drug at a time-of-day
when the side effects may be the most tolerable.
PETER REISS, MD: It's usually given at
night, efavirenz, so before bedtime, because the perception is that it may
bother people less if they take it at night and the problem sets in when
they may already be asleep. ANNOUNCER: Doctors say that for most patients,
the best advice is: Stick with the drug, and wait out any problem with side
effects.
GRAEME MOYLE, MD: In general, the average
time that these effects last is around three to four weeks so we usually
advise people that once you're through that first month of dosing, you'll
probably find that either those effects have completely gone or they've
diminished to a point that they're not noticeable. There is a small
proportion of people, perhaps five to ten percent who get episodes of
dreaming that last for a lot longer than that and perhaps persist with the
medication for a longer period of time. But it rarely leads to those people
discontinuing their medication.
ANNOUNCER: For help with sleep problems,
doctors have other suggestions.
GRAEME MOYLE, MD: A lot of the patients
report that the content of their dreams may relate to their activities of
daily living, their job and those sorts of things. So trying to avoid
thinking negative things in the late evening so don't watch the news, don't
watch a horror movie, may help avoid having negative experiences as part of
the dreams.
ANNOUNCER: Still other management strategies
include avoiding heavy meals at nighttime, and taking other medications,
including sleeping pills.
Despite the side effects with Sustiva, Winston says his HIV is under
control.
WINSTON BATCHELOR: My recent test, about two
weeks ago, like I said, my viral load's down. I think it was down to 64, the
count was down to 64, so it was pretty good. And my T-cells are up to about
650 or 630, the highest it's been in the past two years. So the doctors are
very happy about that.
ANNOUNCER: The effectiveness of Sustiva, in
combination with other medicines, is one reason to stick with the regimen.
WINSTON BATCHELOR: Here I am 13 years later,
and I'm still alive, thank God. So I just count every day. Even though I get
sick and I come out of it, I always count every day.
Next: For AIDS Patients, Subtle
Thinking Problems Could Signal Later Dementia
Last updated: 2/03. Last reviewed: 10/05.
top ~ next ~
send page
to friend
|