Polysomnographic evaluation of uninfected babies born to human immunodeficiency virus type 1 positive mothers

Authors

  • Mario Eduardo Archila Meléndez Universidad de Antioquia
  • Margarita María Giraldo Chica Instituto Neurológico de Antioquia , Neurociencias Universidad de Antioquia
  • William Cornejo Ochoa Universidad de Antioquia
  • Jorge Alejandro Henao-Mejía Yale University
  • María Teresa Rugeles López Universidad de Antioquia
  • Magda Lahorgue Nunes Pontifícia Universidade do Rio Grande do Sul

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17533/udea.iatreia.13673

Keywords:

Central Nervous System, Electroencephalography, HIV, Maternal Exposure, Newborn, Polysomnography, Pregnancy, Sleep

Abstract

Introduction: Type 1 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) is a lymphotropic and neurotropic retrovirus. Thus, it causes immunological and neurological alterations particularly in children. In the neonatal period the maturational changes of the central nervous system occur rapidly, and their alteration can be reflected in processes such as the sleep-awake pattern.

Objective: To evaluate sleep organization, EEG and respiratory pattern in newborns to HIV-1 positive mothers.

Methods: 22 infants underwent polysomnography. Delta brushes number in REM and NREM sleep, duration of interburst interval and interhemispheric synchrony were used to calculate EEG maturation. Analysis of the sleep architecture was based on polysomnographic sleep percentage of REM, NREM and transitional sleep to total sleep time.

Results: The difference between electroencephalographically calculated and clinically calculated conceptional age was less than two weeks. Percentages of REM and NREM sleep ranged from 39-64 and 30-58 with a median of 52.5 and 36.5 respectively. Concordance was lower in newborns who had high transitional sleep percentages, compared to that in newborns who did not have high such characteristic (p less 0.05).

Discussion: Despite intrauterine exposure to HIV-1 and to antiretroviral drugs we did not observe a significant effect on EEG maturation. The decreased concordance in newborns with high transitional sleep percentages would suggest an alteration in the maturation process, but this aspect itself is not sufficient to consider that intrauterine exposure to HIV-1 and antiretrovirals affect the entire sleep architecture Future studies should clarify whether the decreased concordance between behavior and NREM sleep is replicable.

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Author Biographies

Mario Eduardo Archila Meléndez, Universidad de Antioquia

Research Assistant

School of Medicine
Immunovirology Group
University of Antioquia

William Cornejo Ochoa, Universidad de Antioquia

Titular professor in University of Antioquia.UPB
Head Graduate Program in Child Neurology U of A
Group Director of Research in Child and Adolescent Disorders (Pediaciencias)
Member Group Molecular Genetics Research (Genmol)
Full member of the Colombian Association of Neurology (ACN) and Child Neurology Colombian Association (Asconi)

Jorge Alejandro Henao-Mejía, Yale University

Associated Research, Department of Immunology, School of Medicine, Yale University.

María Teresa Rugeles López, Universidad de Antioquia

Professor
School of Medicine
Head
Immunovirology Group
University of Antioquia

Magda Lahorgue Nunes, Pontifícia Universidade do Rio Grande do Sul

Department of Neurology and Pediatrics, PUCRS School of Medicine, Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil

Published

2013-07-02

How to Cite

1.
Archila Meléndez ME, Giraldo Chica MM, Cornejo Ochoa W, Henao-Mejía JA, Rugeles López MT, Lahorgue Nunes M. Polysomnographic evaluation of uninfected babies born to human immunodeficiency virus type 1 positive mothers. Iatreia [Internet]. 2013 Jul. 2 [cited 2025 Dec. 5];26(3):p 269-277. Available from: https://revistas.udea.edu.co/index.php/iatreia/article/view/13673

Issue

Section

Original research

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