Wednesday, 8 January 2014

The Science of HIV & AIDS in the UK

The biology and impact of the world's worst pandemic

Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Particle
New HIV Infections, AIDS cases and HIV Deaths in the UK by year
Side effects...
This means that individuals using HAART have to take medication every day for the rest of their lives, and this often causes severe side effects. When individuals first start treatment they may suffer headaches, hypertension or general malaise (feeling unwell), although these usually improve or disappear with time. Other side effects can include diarrhoea, nausea, fatigue, anaemia, lipodystrophy, skin problems, neuropathy, mitochondrial toxicity, dyslipidaemia and bone problems. Whilst most people who take anti-HIV medications have some side effects it must not be assumed that everyone gets every side effect that has ever been written down.

Another problem with combating HIV is that a number of different strains of the virus can arise due to differences in selection pressures as the virus encounters different individuals, different drugs and different routes of spread. This can result in resistance to multiple anti-retrovirals and frequently occurs through a process called recombination. It occurs because each HIV virion carries two complete RNA genomic strands, meaning that homologous recombination can occur when a cell is coinfected with two different but related strains. The two strains may then exchange genetic material, including drug resistance traits. The process of recombination also therefore poses theoretical problems for the development of a safe vaccine against HIV.
The situation is also made worse by the fact that increasing numbers of patients are found to be carrying resistant forms of the virus at diagnosis, even before any drug therapy has been administered. Indeed, in 2004 an estimated 9% of new HIV diagnoses were found to be drug resistant strains, presumably acquired from individuals who had already received treatment. If patients then acquire additional strains of the virus with different resistance profiles the process of recombination can yield multiply-resistant viruses. In a case described recently in the Lancet this resulted in an individual producing a strain of the virus that was resistant to every available anti-retroviral agent. The patient in question also progressed to AIDS and died within six months of becoming infected.

 

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