(^146) Medical-Surgical Nursing Demystified
- Night sweats—immune system triggered response.
 - Fever—may be due to a concurrent infection related to a low WBC count.
 - Malnutrition—due to poor appetite, poor nutrition, nausea and vomiting, and
most often from a secondary infection; decreased protein synthesis. 
INTERPRETING TEST RESULTS
- Less than 200 T-cells per microliter—the CD4 lymphocyte is the most com-
monly used count; <200 cells/μl signals the process from HIV to AIDS, and
thus, increases the risk for malignancies and advancing infection. - Positive HIV antibody titer—95 percent positive 6 weeks after contact. Often
used with the Western blot to confirm diagnosis. - Positive Western blot—confirms positive HIV test.
 
TREATMENT
- High-calorie and high-protein diet to combat wasting and weight loss.
 - Administer antibiotics to combat opportunistic infections:
- trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole
 
 - Administer antiviral medication to suppress HIV replication, causing support
of the immune system and fewer opportunistic infections.- Nucleoside analogs (have antiviral activity):
- didanosine
 - zidovudine
 - stavudine
 - zalcitabine
 
 - Nucleotide analog:
- tenofovir
 
 - Protease inhibitors (suppress HIV replication):
- fortovase
 - ritonavir
 - indinavir
 - nelfinavir
 
 - Nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (stop reverse transcriptase
at a different site): 
 - Nucleoside analogs (have antiviral activity):