%0 Journal Article %T Stroke and HIV: Correlation between Viral Load and Type of Stroke %A Prince Eliot Galieni Sounga Bandzouzi %A Ghislain Armel Mpandzou %A Josu¨¦ Euberma Diatewa %A Patience Moudeko M¡¯Foutou %A Dina Happia Motoula-Latou %A Charles Godefroy Koubemba %A Paul Macaire Ossou-Nguiet %A Donatien Moukassa %J Neuroscience & Medicine %P 163-167 %@ 2158-2947 %D 2021 %I Scientific Research Publishing %R 10.4236/nm.2021.124012 %X Introduction: The role of immunosuppression of TCD4+ lymphocytes in the onset of stroke in people living with HIV has been reported in numerous studies examining the co-morbidity of stroke and HIV. Objective: To determine the correlation between the viral load and the type of stroke. Methodology: This was a 7-month cross-sectional descriptive study carried out in the Neurology Department of Loandjili General Hospital in Pointe-Noire. The study population consisted of patients living with HIV who had a stroke confirmed by brain scan. The sero-immunological investigation consisted of looking for T lymphocyte typing from two kits: a CD4+ T lymphocyte typing reagent kit (BD FACS Presto TM) and a GeneXpert kit for viral load (Xpert®HIV-1 Viral Load). The database was made from the 2010 version of Microsoft Excel. Results: We included 16 patients living with HIV, 56% of whom were women with a sex ration of 0.78. The mean age was 56.92 ¡À 11.21. The mean number of TCD4+ lymphocytes was 413.44 ¡À 677.95/mm3; minimum: 93/mm3; maximum: 2854/mm3. The mean viral load was 17,996.31 ¡À 20,982.22/mm3; minimum: 1002/mm3; maximum: 67,229/mm3. No significant difference between the viral load and the occurrence of the stroke (p = 0.13). Conclusion: Our study did not show a causal link between viral load, immunosuppression of TCD4+ lymphocytes and the onset of stroke. %K Viral Load %K HIV %K Stroke %U http://www.scirp.org/journal/PaperInformation.aspx?PaperID=114306