Cognitive disorders associated with HIV infection may be due to focal lesions (lymphoma, toxoplasmosis, progressive multifocal leukoencephalitis, etc.), metabolic encephalopathy (e.g. hepatic insufficiency) or psychiatric disorders (depression). In the absence of such causes a "cognitive and motor syndrome associated with HIV infection" has been defined on clinical criteria (Working group of the American Academy of Neurology, 1991). This syndrome is not consistently associated with any specific lesion. Neither the multifocal encephalitis of HIV or CMV infection nor the diffuse leukoencephalopathy associated with HIV are the only causes. The existence of a neocortical neuronal loss has been suggested by several retrospective studies, but our prospective study has not shown cortical or subcortical atrophy. Measurement of neuronal density in Brodmann's areas 4,9 and 40 has not revealed a significant loss either global, by layer, or by column. The only constant lesion was gliosis of the cortex and white matter. Neuronal loss, therefore, is not indispensable to the occurrence of cognitive disorders in AIDS. The mechanism of dementia might be: dysfunction of cortical neurons (dendritic abnormalities, virus/neurotransmitter competition); subcortical dysfunction, as suggested by the high density of microglial nodules in that region; white matter lesions which could be due to abnormalities in the blood-brain barrier. The expression of cell adhesion molecules (VCAM-1, VLA-4, ICAM-1 and LFA-1) by endothelial cerebral cells is not significantly different in AIDS patients, demented or not, and in patients with multiple sclerosis. In contrast, the expression of VCAM-1 by astrocytes is significantly increased in demented AIDS patients compared with non demented ones.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)