Jerry Wesch
Northwestern University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Jerry Wesch.
Aids Care-psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of Aids\/hiv | 1999
Judith M. Siegel; Frederick J. Angulo; Roger Detels; Jerry Wesch; A. Mullen
The impact of pet ownership on depression was tested among a sample of gay and bisexual men (n = 1,872). Multivariate analyses, controlling for demographics and baseline depressive symptomatology, showed that neither pet ownership nor the presence of HIV infection was associated with depression. Depression was influenced by the presence of AIDS and by having relatively few confidants. Analyses among HIV-infected men only showed that persons with AIDS who owned pets reported less depression than persons with AIDS who did not own pets. This beneficial effect of pet ownership occurred principally among persons who reported fewer confidants. These results suggest that by enhancing companionship for some HIV-infected persons, pets may buffer the stressful impact of AIDS.
Perceptual and Motor Skills | 1991
Ola A. Selnes; Lisa P. Jacobson; Ana M. Machado; James T. Becker; Jerry Wesch; Eric N. Miller; Barbara R. Visscher; Justin C. McArthur
This study reports normative data for a group of 733 homosexual/bisexual men stratified by age (range 25 to 54 years) and by education on the following six neuropsychological tests: (1) Digit Span (WAIS—R), (2) Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test, (3) Symbol Digit Modalities Test, (4) Controlled Oral Word Association Test, (5) Grooved Pegboard, and (6) The Trail Making Test. Analysis demonstrates that both age and education are important determinants of performance for several of these measures.
Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 1997
Noya Galai; Lawrence P. Park; Jerry Wesch; Barbara R. Visscher; Sharon A. Riddler; Joseph B. Margolick
Cigarette smoking as a risk factor in progression of HIV-1 disease was investigated in the Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study of homosexual men. Longitudinal data for T-cell subsets, HIV-related clinical symptoms, smoking behavior, and AIDS medication use were collected semiannually from 2,499 HIV-1-seropositive men for up to 9 years. Survival methods, including Kaplan-Meier analysis and multivariate Cox regression models, were used to assess the effect of cigarette smoking on development of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP), AIDS, death, and self-reported oral thrush. After adjustment for CD4+ lymphocyte count and use of antiretroviral and anti-PCP medications, smoking was not significantly associated with progression to PCP, AIDS, or death in either the HIV-seroprevalent or-seroincident cohort members. Among men who had baseline CD4+ cell counts > 200/microliter, smoking was associated with a 40% increase in the hazard of oral thrush (p < or = 0.01). These data indicate that cigarette smoking does not have a major effect on the progression of HIV-1 infection to AIDS or death but may affect the incidence of oral thrush.
Neurology | 1995
Ola A. Selnes; Noya Galai; Helena Bacellar; Eric N. Miller; James T. Becker; Jerry Wesch; W. G. van Gorp; Justin C. McArthur
Objective To describe changes in cognitive functioning before and after development of an acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS)-defining illness or CD4+ lymphocyte count <200/mm3 in participants in the Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study. Methods The study population included participants who either were diagnosed with an AIDS-defining illness (n = 52) or had at least one measurement of CD4+ count <200/mm3 (n = 57) and who had at least four neuropsycho-logical (NP) evaluations, two or more before and two or more after the AIDS diagnosis. A group of subjects with clinical diagnosis of dementia (n = 29) was also included for comparison. The NP test battery included measures of attention, memory, constructional abilities, and psychomotor speed. Longitudinal data analysis, using the generalized estimating equation, was performed separately for each NP measure. Time was measured in months from the date of clinical AIDS or CD4+ <200/mm3. Results Before AIDS, the dementia group showed significant decline (slope different from zero) only on measures of psychomotor speed. For all other measures, there was no evidence of decline in performance before AIDS for the other groups. ARer development of AIDS, the group with clinical AIDS showed significant decline on psychomotor speed but none on the other cognitive measures. The group with CD4+ <200/mm3 did not show significant decline on any of the cognitive measures after AIDS. As expected, the dementia group showed significant decline on all measures. Sensory neuropathy was associated with a significant decline in performance on measures of psychomotor speed after AIDS. Antiretroviral therapy was not associated with any measurable changes in NP performance. Conclusion These results are consistent with previous findings showing no significant decline in cognitive functions before AIDS, unless overt dementia is present, and no decline in immunosuppressed subjects who have had no AIDS-defining illness. By contrast, in subjects who have developed clinical AIDS, there is mild decline in fine motor skills but no significant change in other cognitive domains.
Journal of Substance Abuse | 1993
David G. Ostrow; Eugenio D. Beltran; Jill G. Joseph; Wayne Difranceisco; Jerry Wesch; Joan S. Chmiel
Since initial reports emerged of an association between recreational drug use and high-risk sexual behaviors in gay men, there has been interest in studying this relationship for its relevance to behavioral interventions. Reported here are the longitudinal patterns of alcohol and recreational drug use in the Chicago Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study (MACS)/Coping and Change Study (CCS) of gay men. A pattern of decreasing drug use over 6 years was observed that paralleled a decline in high-risk sexual behavior (i.e., unprotected anal intercourse). In contrast, alcohol consumption tended to be more stable over time, and to show no relationship to sexual behavior change. Men who combined volatile nitrite (popper) use with other recreational drugs were at highest risk both behaviorally and in terms of human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV) seroconversion throughout the study. Popper use also was associated independently with lapse from safer sexual behaviors (failure to use a condom during receptive anal sex). Use of other recreational substances showed no relationship to sexual behavior change patterns, and stopping popper use was unrelated to improvement in safer sexual behavior. When popper use and lapse from safer sex were reanalyzed, controlling for primary relationship status, popper use was associated with failure to use condoms during receptive anal sex among nonmonogamous men only. These findings suggest an association between popper use and high-risk sexual behavior among members of the Chicago MACS/CCS cohort that has relevance to HIV prevention intervention efforts.
Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology | 1995
Craig Uchiyama; Louis F. D'Elia; Ann M. Dellinger; James T. Becker; Ola A. Selnes; Jerry Wesch; Bai Bai Chen; Paul Satz; Wilfred G. van Gorp; Eric N. Miller
The present investigation examines the alternate-form and longitudinal reliability of two versions of the Auditory-Verbal Learning Test (AVLT) on a large, multiregional, healthy male sample. Subjects included 2,059 bisexual and homosexual HIV-seronegative males recruited from the Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study from centers in Baltimore, Chicago, Los Angeles, and Pittsburgh. The findings revealed no significant differences between forms upon initial or 1-year longitudinal administration, supporting the equivalence of the two versions. However, significant practice effects were noted longitudinally, arguing for the need of appropriate retest normative data. Furthermore, as age, ethnicity, and education were found to significantly affect test performance, it is recommended that normative data be interpreted according to these variables. In addition to providing normative and longitudinal data, this investigation presents information concerning the use and limitations of the alternate forms of the AVLT.
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology | 1996
Constantine G. Lyketsos; Donald R. Hoover; Marcella Guccione; Mary Amanda Dew; Jerry Wesch; Bing Eg; Glenn J. Treisman
The objective of this study was to describe the prevalence and course of depressive symptoms before AIDS in HIV-infected homosexual men. A descriptive and comparative analysis of data from HIV-infected and-uninfected homosexual men in the Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study was performed. The Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D) was the primary measure of depressive symptoms. The prevalence of depressive symptoms and CES-D caseness estimates in the AIDS-free HIV-infected homosexual men were stable over time. Small differences between HIV seropositive and seronegative men were detected on the CES-D and on three of its subscales. These were mostly accounted for by less hope, and by more fearfulness, insomnia, and anorexia in the seropositive cohort. We concluded that there does not appear to be an overall increase in depressive symptoms in HIV-infected homosexual men from the time of infection until prior to AIDS. However, this group of men consistently report specific depressive symptoms more often. Implications of these findings for the clinical care of HIV-infected patients is discussed.
Neurology | 1994
W. G. van Gorp; Eric N. Miller; T. D. Marcotte; Wilfrid Dixon; D. Paz; Ola A. Seines; Jerry Wesch; James T. Becker; Charles H. Hinkin; Maura Mitrushina; Paul Satz; Joel D. Weisman; Stephan L. Buckingham; P.K. Stenquist
Article abstract–Previous studies have identified age as a risk factor for many neurologic disorders, and a “cerebral reserve” factor has been postulated to explain these findings. This study examined whether age represents a risk factor for HIV-1-related neuropsychological dysfunction. Subjects for study 1 were primarily asymptomatic seropositive (n = 1,066) and seronegative (n = 1,004) nonelderly male community volunteers who completed neuropsychological and reaction time measures. Data analyses revealed a significant effect for age on reaction time and timed neuropsychological measures, but no interaction between age and serostatus. Study 2, employing a similar neuropsychological battery, consisted of 76 seropositive men (29 over age 55) recruited from community outpatient clinics and 47 seronegative controls. We found serostatus and age to have main effects on a number of measures, but a trend for an effect of age-serostatus interaction on only one measure.
Alcohol | 1995
Lili Penkower; Mary Amanda Dew; Lawrence A. Kingsley; Susan Y. Zhou; Constantine G. Lyketsos; Jerry Wesch; J.Walton Senterfitt; Donald R. Hoover; James T. Becker
Alcohol consumption as a cofactor in the progression of HIV infection was examined in 1,446 homosexual and bisexual HIV + men enrolled in the Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study who had a minimum of three visits. Two measures of drinking were employed: initial level, and pattern during the study period. Outcome measures included AIDS-related symptoms and AIDS diagnosis. Level of drinking at entry to the study was not significantly associated with either AIDS-related symptoms at final visit or with AIDS diagnosis. However, men who decreased drinking were more likely to report thrush, fatigue, weight loss, and diarrhea at their final visit. Most likely, these men decreased drinking as a result of failing health, not because their drinking pattern influenced symptom onset. These data support earlier reports that found no relationship between alcohol consumption and progression to AIDS.
AIDS | 1997
Saah Aj; Horn Td; Donald R. Hoover; Chen C; Whitmore Se; Flynn C; Jerry Wesch; Roger Detels; Roger Anderson
Objective:To determine the effect of sun exposure on HIV progression. Design:Cross-sectional survey nested within a longitudinal cohort study. Setting:The Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study. Participants:A total of 1155 white HIV-seronegative and 496 white HIV-seropositive homosexual men, of whom 142 seroconverted during the study. Main outcome measures:T-helper lymphocyte decline and AIDS. Results:No positive correlation was found between the development of AIDS or loss of T-helper lymphocytes and (i) phenotypic characteristics associated with enhanced ultraviolet radiation (UVR) sensitivity (hair or eye color, skin type), or (ii) reported UVR exposure (sun lamp/tanning bed use, frequency of beach vacations, sunscreen use), or (iii) composite score of UVR sensitivity and exposure history. The composite scores and individual measures of risk were not correlated with rate of T-helper lymphocyte decline (slope) based upon rank correlation (correlation coefficient, 0.04; P = 0.32). In fact, individuals purposefully seeking the sun had slower T-helper lymphocyte declines. Sensitivity to UVR was also not significantly associated with AIDS [odds ratio (OR), 1.11 per unit of higher composite score; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.66–1.88; P = 0.63]. Among individuals who were HIV-infected at baseline, those who have been purposely seeking sun exposure were less likely to have AIDS (OR, 0.67; 95% CI, 0.39–1.11; P = 0.12). Conclusions:These data suggest that phenotypic characteristics of high UVR sensitivity and exposure are not highly correlated with decline in T-helper lymphocyte count or with progression to AIDS.