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Book Review
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Volume 340:324-325 January 28, 1999 Number 4
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The Neurology of AIDS

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Edited by Howard E. Gendelman, Stuart A. Lipton, Leon Epstein, and Susan Swindells. 615 pp., illustrated. New York, Chapman & Hall, 1998. $169.95. ISBN 0-412-08631-X.

Worldwide, 33 million adults and 2 million children are infected with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1). Despite preventive efforts, the epidemic of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) continues to spread rapidly. Every day 16,000 persons become infected with the virus. Most of them live in developing countries, where costly antiretroviral medications are not available. It is estimated that in 30 to 50 percent of HIV-1–infected people, neurologic complications will develop. This virus can affect virtually every aspect of the central and peripheral nervous systems, directly or indirectly. The socioeconomic consequences of the neurologic dysfunction caused by HIV-1 infection are . . . [Full Text of this Article]




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