12 December 2016 11 9K Report

Hello, all. My areas of research are memory and neurodegeneration, and I am not very well versed in the HIV-related dementia/HAND literature. So, if there is someone here reading this that is, I would be grateful for some feedback.

Basically, we have some data showing a strong correlation between a (relatively) novel memory measure we have been developing (recency ratio) and CD4 count, thus suggesting this memory measure is sensitive to infection levels. Of note, this is independent on general cognitive ability (MMSE) and was measured in a relatively young population. Also, CD4 does not appear to be correlated significantly with other measures of memory in this sample, including immediate recency (which has been reported in several papers before as a typical sign of cogntive impairment in HIV).

My question is: Is this finding of interest beyond simply reporting another cognitive correlate of decline in HIV? Is there any utility in this cognitive marker for screening and/or clinical assessment?

Thanks,

Davide

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