WHAT IS AIDS?

     

 

 

 

 

 

Definition

AIDS stands for "Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome." AIDS is caused by the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV). AIDS is the final and most serious stage of HIV disease, in which the signs and symptoms of severe immune deficiency have developed.


Alternative names

Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome.


Causes, incidence and risk factors

The Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) causes AIDS. The virus attacks the immune system and leaves the body vulnerable to a variety of life-threatening illnesses and cancers. Common bacteria, yeast, parasites, and viruses that ordinarily do not cause serious disease in people with fully functional immune systems can causefatal illnesses in people with AIDS.

HIV has been found in saliva, tears, nervous system tissue, blood, semen (including pre-seminal fluid, or "pre-cum"), vaginal fluid, and breast milk. However, only blood, semen, vaginal secretions, and breast milk have been proven to transmit infection to others.

TRASSMISSION OF THE VIRUS OCCURS:

through sexual contact --including oral, vaginal, and anal sex.
through blood -- via blood transfusions or needle sharin
from mother to child-- a pregnant woman can passively transmit the virus to her fetus, or a nursing mother can transmit it to her baby

Other transmission methods are rare and include accidental needle injury, artificial insemination through donated semen, and througha donated organ.

HIV infection is NOT spread by casual contact such as hugging and touching, by touching dishes, doorknobs,or toilet seats, during participation in sports, or by mosquitoes. It is NOT transmitted to a person who donates blood or organs. However, it can be transmitted to the person receiving blood or organs from an infected donor. This is why blood banks and organ donor programs screen donors, blood, and tissues thoroughly.

Those at highest risk include homosexual or bisexual men engaging in unprotected sex, intravenous drug users who share needles, the sexual partners of those who participate in high-risk activities, infants born to mothers with HIV, and persons who received blood transfusions or clotting products between 1977 and 1985 (prior to standard screening for the virus in the blood).

AIDS begins with HIV infection. People who become infected with HIV may have no symptoms for up to ten years, but they can still transmit the infection to others. Meanwhile, their immune system gradually weakens until they are diagnosed with AIDS. Acute HIV infection progresses over time to asymptomatic HIV infevction  and then to early symptomatic HIV infection and later, to AIDS (very advanced HIV infection):

HIV Infection (acute HIV infection) -->early asymptomatic HIV infection -->early symptomatic HIV infection -->AIDS

Most individuals infected with HIV will progress to AIDS if not treated. However, there is a very small subset of patients who develop AIDS very slowly or never at all. These patients are called non-progressors.
 


Prevention

Prevention of AIDS requires foresight and self-discipline. The requirements often seem personally restrictive but they are effective and can save your life.

REQUIREMENTS:

Do not have sexual intercourse with: People known or suspected to be infected with AIDS. Multiple partners. A person who has multiple partners. People who use intravenous drugs.  

Do not use intravenous drugs. If intravenous drugs are used, do not share needles or syringes. Avoid exposure to blood from injuries or nosebleeds where the HIV status of the bleeding individual is unknown. Protective clothing, masks, and goggles may be appropriate when caring for people who are injured

Anyone who tests positive for HIV may pass the disease on to others and should not donate blood, plasma, body organs, or sperm. From a legal, ethical, and moral standpoint, they should warn any prospective sexual partner of their HIV positive status. They should not exchange body fluids during sexual activity and must use whatever preventative measures (such as a latex condom) will afford the partner the most protection

HIV positive women should be counseled before becoming pregnant about the risk to unborn children and medical advances which may help prevent the fetus from becoming infected.

Mothers who are HIV positive should not breast feed.

"Safe sex" practices, such as latex condoms, are highly effective in preventing HIV transmission. HOWEVER, there remains a risk of acquiring the infection even with the use of condoms. Abstinence is the only sure way to prevent sexual transmission of HIV.

HIV-positive patients who are taking anti-retroviral medications are less likely to transmit the virus. For example, pregnant women who are on treatment at the time of delivery transmit HIV to the infant about 5% of the time

The U.S. blood supply is among the safest in the world. Nearly all people infected with HIV through blood transfusions received those transfusions before 1985, the year HIV testing began for all donated blood. Currently, the risk of infection with HIV in the United States through receiving a blood transfusion or blood products is extremely low and has become progressively lower, even in geographic areas with high HIV prevalence.


Symptoms

The symptoms of AIDS are primarily the result of infections that do not normally develop in individuals with healthy immune systems. These infections are termed "opportunistic infections."

Patients with AIDS have had their immune system destroyed by HIV and are susceptible to such opportunistic infections. The general symptoms are fevers, sweats, chills weakness, and weight loss. See the signs and tests section below for a list of the common AIDS-defining opportunistic infections and the major symptoms associated with them.

Note: Initial infection may produce no symptoms. Some people with HIV infection remain without symptoms for years between the time of exposure and development of AIDS.

Sign and test

Not all patients infected with HIV have AIDS. The patients who have tested positive for the HIV antibody test slowly develop AIDS as HIV destroys their immune systems.

In order for a patient who is infected with HIV to have AIDS, their immune system must be severely damaged. The severity of the immune system damage is measured by an absolute CD4 lymphocyte count. The CD4 lymphocyte is an important cell in the blood stream that helps protect from several infections and cancers.

IF A PERSON INFECTED WITH HIV HAS A CD4 COUNT LESS THAN 200 cell/cu.mm, THEIR ARE SAID TO HAVE AIDS.

The following is a list of "AIDS-defining" infections and cancers that people with AIDS acquire as their CD4 count decreases. Many other illnesses and corresponding symptoms may develop in addition to those listed here.

CD4 COUNT BELOW 350 cell/cu.mm.

Herpes Simple Virus; causes ulcers in your mouth and/or genitals
Tuberculosis; infection by the tuberculosis bacteria that predominately affects the lungs
Oral and/or vaginal thrush; yeast infection of the mouth or genitals
Herpes zoster; ulcers over a discrete patch of skin caused by this virus
Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma; cancer of the lymph glands.

 CD4 COUNT BELOW 200 cell/cu.mm.

Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia.
Candida esophagitis; painful yeast infection of the esophagus.

CD4 COUNT BELOW 100 cell/cu.mm.

Cryptococcal meningitis; infection of the brain by this fungus.
AIDS Dementia; worsening and slowing of mental function caused by HIV
Toxoplasmosis encephalitis; infection of the brain by this parasite.
Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy; a viral disease of the brain caused by a virus (called the JC virus) that caused quick decline in cognitive and motor functions.
Wasting Syndrome; extreme weight loss and anorexia caused by HIV.

CD4 COUNT BELOW 50 cell/cu.mm.

Mycobacterium; a blood infection by a bacterium related to tuberculosis.
Cytomegalovirus infection; a viral infection that can affect almost any organ system, especially the eyes.

In addition to the CD4 lymphocyte count, T (thymus derived) lymphocyte count, chest x-rays, pap smears, and other tests are useful in managing HIV disease.

Treatment

There is no cure for AIDS at this time. However, several treatments are available that can delay the progress of disease for those with HIV and improve the quality of life of those who have developed symptoms.

Antiviral therapy suppresses the replication of the HIV infection in the body. A combination of several antiretroviral agents, termed Highly Active Anti-Retroviral Therapy (HAART), has been highly effective in reducing the number of HIV particles in the blood stream (as measured by a blood test called the viral load) and as a result increase the CD4 positive T lymphocyte count.

Although this is not a cure for HIV, and people on HAART with suppressed levels of HIV can still transmit the virus to others through sex or sharing of needles, the treatment shows great promise. There is good evidence that if the levels of HIV remain suppressed and the CD4 count remains high (>200) that prolongation of life can be achieved. However, HIV tends to become resistant in patients who do not take their medications every day. Also, certain strains of HIV mutate easily and may become resistant to HAART. When HIV becomes resistant to HAART, salvage therapy is required to try to suppress the resistant strain of HIV. This is often not successful, unfortunately, and the patient will usually develop AIDS and its complications.

Treatment with HAART is not without complications. HAART is a collection of different medications, each with its own side effect profile. Some common side effects are nausea, headache, weakness, malaise, and fat accumulation on your back and abdomen. Any doctor prescribing HAART should be carefully following the patient for possible side effects associated with the combination of medications being taken. In addition, routine blood tests measuring CD4 counts and HIV viral load (a blood test that measures how much virus is in the blood) will be taken every three to four months. The goal is to get the CD4 count as close to normal as possible, and to suppress the HIV viral load to an undetectable level.

Other antiviral agents are in investigational stages. Growth factors that stimulate cell growth, such as epogen (erthythropoetin) and G-CSF are sometimes used to treat anemia and low white blood cell counts associated with AIDS.

Medications are also used to prevent opportunistic infections and can keep AIDS patients healthier for longer periods of time. Opportunistic infections are treated as they occur.

At the present time, there is no cure for AIDS. It has proven to be a universally fatal illness. However, most patients survive many years following diagnosis. HAART has dramatically increased the time from diagnosis to death and research continues in drug treatments and vaccine development.

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25 Years of AIDS Research

June 5, 2006 -  marks the 25th anniversary of the first reported cases of what is now known as the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). From a handful of initial reports in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, AIDS has grown into a global pandemic affecting men, women and children in nearly every country in the world.

The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), the cause of AIDS, has now infected more than 65 million people worldwide, of whom 25 million have died, according to estimates of the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS). AIDS is the deadliest pandemic of our generation and one of the worst in history. In the year 2005 alone, approximately 4.1 million people worldwide, half of them women, became infected with HIV, and about 2.8 million individuals with HIV/AIDS died. More than 95 percent of these infections and deaths occurred in developing countries, most of which are also burdened by other significant health challenges. In these nations, HIV/AIDS threatens not only human welfare, but social, political and economic stability as well.

In the United States, an estimated one million people are living with HIV infection, and 40,000 new infections occur each year. HIV infection rates continue to climb among women, racial and ethnic minorities, young homosexual men, individuals with certain addictive disorders and people over 50 years of age. To date, HIV/AIDS has killed more than half a million people in our country.

The magnitude of the HIV/AIDS pandemic requires a robust, multi-faceted and sustained global response from all sectors of society. At the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH), we are committed to accelerating the research that will help end the scourge of HIV/AIDS. The NIH effort represents the largest public investment in HIV/AIDS research anywhere in the world. In fiscal year 2006, $2.9 billion has been appropriated for NIH AIDS-related research. The resources devoted to HIV/AIDS research by our many partners in the research enterprise also have been significant.

The returns on these investments have been extraordinary, and built on NIH-supported advances in fields such as immunology and virology that occurred in the 1960s and 1970s. Within three years of the first reported AIDS cases in 1981, the virus that causes the syndrome, HIV, was discovered. In 1984, a sensitive and specific diagnostic test for antibodies to HIV was developed and used to screen the U.S. blood supply, making it extremely safe since 1985. Scientists around the world illuminated the structure and genetic organization of HIV and made rapid advances in understanding its disease-causing mechanisms. These advances in turn facilitated the rapid development and testing of potent anti-HIV drugs and guidelines for the use of these medications. Combination antiretroviral therapy has played a major role in the dramatic decreases in HIV-related morbidity and mortality where these medications have been used. In addition, certain antiretroviral drug regimens dramatically reduce the risk of HIV transmission from mother to child. The risk factors associated with HIV transmission have been well defined, providing the foundation for prevention efforts. In virtually all developed nations and in a growing number of developing countries, prevention programs have proven effective in slowing the spread of HIV infection, although rates of new infections, even in countries considered to be “success stories,” continue at an unacceptably high level.

In addition, our AIDS research investment is providing dividends for people with other diseases. AIDS-related research is helping to unravel the mysteries surrounding many other infectious, malignant, neurologic, autoimmune and metabolic diseases. AIDS research has led to an entirely new paradigm for the design, development and testing of drugs to treat other viral infections. For example, the drug 3TC, developed to treat HIV/AIDS, is now a widely used and effective therapy for chronic hepatitis B infection. Drugs developed to prevent and treat AIDS-associated opportunistic infections also provide benefit to patients undergoing cancer chemotherapy or receiving anti-transplant rejection therapy. In addition, AIDS research is providing a new understanding of the relationship between viruses and cancer.

Despite numerous advances in HIV/AIDS research, the pandemic continues to undermine lives, communities and societies. Clearly, much remains to be accomplished in AIDS research, both in terms of the scientific and medical challenges of HIV disease and with regard to the logistical and operational challenges of making HIV therapies, prevention services and other interventions available to poor countries.

For example, important challenges remain in the area of therapeutics research. Many patients receiving antiretroviral therapy do not fare well on their treatment regimens due to the development of drug resistance, drug toxicities and side effects. The increasing incidence of metabolic disorders, cardiovascular complications, major organ dysfunction and physical changes associated with current antiretroviral drugs underscores the critical need for new and better treatment regimens. Improved regimens also are needed to treat HIV co-infections such as hepatitis B and C, as well as other opportunistic infections, in order to reduce drug interactions associated with concomitant treatment regimens, as well as problems with adherence to complicated treatment regimens. A high priority of NIH-sponsored AIDS therapeutics research continues to be the development of drugs and therapeutic regimens that are less toxic and have fewer side effects, limit the development of drug resistance, enter viral reservoirs to inhibit viral replication, facilitate easier adherence and are less expensive and more readily accessible.

NIH also reaffirms our commitment to the development of the next generation of prevention modalities, including topical microbicides, which individuals could use to protect themselves against HIV infection. The ultimate defeat of HIV/AIDS will require a multi-pronged effort but will be difficult, if not impossible, without a safe and effective HIV vaccine. Over the past five years, NIH has devoted approximately $2 billion to HIV/AIDS vaccine research.

The development of an HIV vaccine is a complex research challenge because HIV is unusually well equipped to elude immune defenses, as exemplified by its ability to vary extensively, to persist in viral reservoirs and to eventually overcome the immune system. NIH has now conducted or initiated approximately 80 Phase I and two Phase II clinical trials of nearly 50 vaccine candidates, individually or in combination, in collaboration with our partners in academia and industry. Important progress is being made, with promising vaccine candidates advancing rapidly into clinical trials. Among these is a “global” HIV vaccine — targeted to multiple HIV subtypes found worldwide — which has moved into the second phase of clinical testing.

On this sobering anniversary, we remember the millions who have died over these past 25 years, those who continue to live with HIV/AIDS and fight the disease every day and the many thousands who have helped us to further science by participating in AIDS clinical trials. We also are reminded that we must do more, collectively, to slow the scourge of HIV/AIDS at home and abroad: as individuals, protecting ourselves and our loved ones from HIV and working to eliminate stigma and discrimination; as clinicians, utilizing the most current and effective regimens to treat people with HIV disease; as friends and caregivers, helping to ease the suffering of those living with HIV/AIDS; as researchers, developing newer and better tools to help those infected with HIV and to prevent future infections; and as policy-makers and activists, helping to bring the benefits of critical research advances in treatment and prevention to those who need them most.

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