PATTERN OF INJECTING DRUG USES AND HIV-1 INFECTION - ANALYSIS FROM NEEDLE EXCHANGE PROGRAM

Citation
I. Tellado et al., PATTERN OF INJECTING DRUG USES AND HIV-1 INFECTION - ANALYSIS FROM NEEDLE EXCHANGE PROGRAM, Cellular and molecular biology, 43(7), 1997, pp. 1091-1096
Citations number
12
Categorie Soggetti
Cell Biology",Biology
ISSN journal
01455680
Volume
43
Issue
7
Year of publication
1997
Pages
1091 - 1096
Database
ISI
SICI code
0145-5680(1997)43:7<1091:POIDUA>2.0.ZU;2-M
Abstract
Contents of exchanged needles/syringes were analyzed to examine: i) th e prevalence of HIV-1 infection among injecting drug users (IDU's), an d) the classes of drugs injected by the population. A needle exchange program in Puerto Rico (PR) was initiated under the auspices of the PR Department of Health and is currently being administered by the Commu nity Research Initiative of Puerto Rico, Inc. Serological tests for hu man immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) were performed with 387 samp les with clearly visible amounts of blood, which were chosen randomly from the needle exchange program of the San Juan Metropolitan area on the north coast, and also of the Mayaguez area on the west coast of th e island. In addition, 200 syringes without visible amount of blood we re also randomly chosen, their contents were extracted with acidified methanol and analyzed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC/MS) for drug content. One hundred and ninety four of the samples (58%) wer e confirmed to be positive for HIV-1. Four samples contained heroin al one, 190 were positive for cocaine and 2 indicated simultaneous use of both heroin and cocaine. In contrast to existing literature, based mo stly on self-description, which indicates widespread use of heroin and cocaine mixture (''speedball'') among IDU's, our physical evidence su ggests that a large majority of IDU's in PR currently inject cocaine b ut not heroin; and also that mixed drug use is rather rare. Reliabilit y of self-described information may need to be re-evaluated.