“…Although the introduction of combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) has significantly decreased the incidence of HAD, the milder forms of HAND remains prevalent even in the era of cART (Heaton et al, 2010; Heaton et al, 2011; Alfahad and Nath, 2013). The causes for continuing high rates of HAND in the cART era are uncertain, but multifactorial mechanisms have been proposed including, but not limited to, incomplete viral suppression in the central nervous system (CNS) due to poor CNS penetration of some commonly used antiretroviral drugs, presence of drug-resistant viral stain, possible neurotoxicity of cART and the possibility that even very low levels of viral replication in the CNS could induce neural injury or dysfunction due to a prolonged exposure to neuro-inflammatory responses and neurotoxic viral proteins(Heaton et al, 2011; Jaeger and Nath, 2012; Gates and Cysique, 2016). Among the viral proteins is HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein 120 (gp120) that has been implicated as having neurotoxic effects in the CNS(Zhang et al, 2011; Hoefer et al, 2015).…”