Review
Managing HIV infection in patients older than 50 years
Jacqueline M. McMillan, Hartmut Krentz, M. John Gill and David B. Hogan
CMAJ October 22, 2018 190 (42) E1253-E1258; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1503/cmaj.171409
Jacqueline M. McMillan
Department of Medicine (McMillan, Krentz, Gill, Hogan), University of Calgary; Southern Alberta Clinic (Krentz, Gill), Calgary, Alta.
Hartmut Krentz
Department of Medicine (McMillan, Krentz, Gill, Hogan), University of Calgary; Southern Alberta Clinic (Krentz, Gill), Calgary, Alta.
M. John Gill
Department of Medicine (McMillan, Krentz, Gill, Hogan), University of Calgary; Southern Alberta Clinic (Krentz, Gill), Calgary, Alta.
David B. Hogan
Department of Medicine (McMillan, Krentz, Gill, Hogan), University of Calgary; Southern Alberta Clinic (Krentz, Gill), Calgary, Alta.
In this issue
Article tools
Respond to this article
Managing HIV infection in patients older than 50 years
Jacqueline M. McMillan, Hartmut Krentz, M. John Gill, David B. Hogan
CMAJ Oct 2018, 190 (42) E1253-E1258; DOI: 10.1503/cmaj.171409
Jump to section
- Article
- What contributes to the burden of comorbidity in older patients with HIV and AIDS?
- Which specific comorbidities present a challenge?
- Which syndromes associated with aging may occur earlier?
- What else may affect the health of older people living with HIV?
- New HIV infection in older adults
- Conclusion
- Footnotes
- References
- Figures & Tables
- Related Content
- Responses
- Metrics