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HIV/AIDS Clinical Care: Antiretroviral Rounds

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Items 11-20 of 76 are shown

Suppressed but with Side Effects — The Experts Weigh In

Two experts describe how they would manage a patient who is experiencing adverse effects on a cumbersome but otherwise successful antiretroviral regimen, with no resistance testing available.

Suppressed but with Side Effects — Now What?

You inherit a patient who is experiencing adverse effects on a cumbersome but otherwise successful regimen, but no resistance testing is available. How do you manage his care?

A Test Result of Undetermined Significance — Two Specialists Respond

Two HIV specialists explain how they would manage the care of an HIV-infected man whose anal Pap smear showed "atypical squamous cells of undetermined significance."

A Test Result of Undetermined Significance

An HIV-infected man with an undetectable viral load and no symptoms has "atypical squamous cells of undetermined significance" on an anal Pap smear. How would you manage his care?

If It's Not One Thing, It's Another — What Actually Happened

Find out how our latest Antiretroviral Rounds case — a patient with newly diagnosed AIDS, suspected Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia, and acute renal failure — was actually managed.

If It's Not One Thing, It's Another — The Experts Weigh In

Two experts describe how they would manage a patient with newly diagnosed AIDS and suspected Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia who develops renal failure.

If It's Not One Thing, It's Another

A patient with newly diagnosed AIDS and suspected Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia develops renal failure. How would you manage?

Is She or Isn't She?

An HIV-infected pregnant woman says she's taking her antiretrovirals — but the blood test results say otherwise. Two experts describe their approach to management.

Is She or Isn't She?

An HIV-infected pregnant woman says she's taking her antiretrovirals — but the blood test results say otherwise. How would you manage?

Stuck in the Middle

A clinician sustains a needlestick from a patient who refuses HIV testing. An HIV physician, an attorney, and an ethicist weigh provide weigh in on how best to manage.

Items 11-20 of 76 are shown

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