Pathogenesis of HIV-associated depression: contributing factors and underlying mechanisms
Silvere D. Zaongo, Wenlin Wu, Yaokai Chen

TL;DR
People with HIV are more likely to develop depression, and this paper explores the factors and mechanisms behind this increased risk.
Contribution
This paper comprehensively reviews multiple contributing factors and their potential mechanisms in HIV-associated depression.
Findings
PLWH are more likely to experience depression compared to HIV-negative individuals.
Factors like neuroinflammation, stress, and HIV medications may contribute to depression in PLWH.
Understanding these mechanisms could help develop better treatments for depression in HIV patients.
Abstract
Cumulative evidence indicates that compared to HIV negative individuals, people living with HIV (PLWH) have a higher likelihood of developing depression, anxiety, and cognitive disorders. Depression, which is known to be a persistent and overwhelming feeling of sadness accompanied by a loss of interest in usual activities, is one of the most common mental illnesses encountered during HIV infection. Experts believe that several factors such as neuroinflammation, life stressors, lack of sleep, poor nutritional state, opportunistic infections and comorbidities, and HIV medications are contributing factors favoring the development of depression in PLWH. However, the fundamental mechanisms which underlie the involvement of these factors in the emergence of depression in the context of HIV remain poorly explored. Past researches describing the role of one or two of the preceding factors do…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV/AIDS Research and Interventions · Maternal Mental Health During Pregnancy and Postpartum · Tryptophan and brain disorders
