AIDS, in Medicine

or acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, fatal disease caused by a rapidly mutating retrovirus that attacks the immune system and leaves the victim vulnerable to infections, malignancies, and neurological disorders. It was first recognized as a disease in 1981. The virus was isolated in 1983 and was ultimately named the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). There are two forms of the HIV virus, HIV-1 and HIV-2. The majority of cases worldwide are caused by HIV-1. In 1999 an international team of genetic scientists reported that HIV-1 can be traced to a closely related strain of virus, called simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV), that infects a subspecies of chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes troglodytes) in W central Africa. Chimpanzees are hunted for meat in this region, and it is believed the virus may have passed from the blood of chimpanzees into humans through superficial wounds, probably in the early 1930s.

Action of the Virus

In a process still imperfectly understood, HIV infects the CD4 cells (also called T4 or T-helper cells) of the body's immune system, cells that are necessary to activate B-lymphocytes and induce the production of antibodies (see immunity). Although the body fights back, producing billions of lymphocytes daily to fight the billions of copies of the virus, the immune system is eventually overwhelmed, and the body is left vulnerable to opportunistic infections and cancers.

Signs and Symptoms

Some people develop flulike symptoms shortly after infection, but many have no symptoms. It may be a few months or many years before serious symptoms develop in adults; symptoms usually develop within the first two years of life in infants infected in the womb or at birth. Before serious symptoms occur, an infected person may experience fever, weight loss, diarrhea, fatigue, skin rashes, shingles (see herpes zoster), thrush, or memory problems. Infants may fail to develop normally.

The definition of AIDS has been refined as more knowledge has become available. In general it refers to that period in the infection when the CD4 count goes below 200 (from a normal count of 1,000) or when the characteristic opportunistic infections and cancers appear. The conditions associated with AIDS include malignancies such as Kaposi's sarcoma, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, primary lymphoma of the brain, and invasive carcinoma of the cervix. Opportunistic infections characteristic of or more virulent in AIDS include Pneumocystis cariniipneumonia, herpes simplex, cytomegalovirus, and diarrheal diseases caused by cryptosporidium or isospora. In addition, hepatitis C is prevalent in intravenous drug users and hemophiliacs with AIDS, and an estimated 4 to 5 million people who have tuberculosis are coinfected with HIV, each disease hastening the progression of the other. Children may experience more serious forms of common childhood ailments such as tonsillitis and conjunctivitis. These infections conspire to cause a wide range of symptoms (coughing, diarrhea, fever and night sweats, and headaches) and may lead to extreme weight loss, blindness, hallucinations, and dementia before death occurs.

Transmission and Incidence

HIV is not transmitted by casual contact; transmission requires a direct exchange of body fluids, such as blood or blood products, breast milk, semen, or vaginal secretions, most commonly as a result of sexual activity or the sharing of needles among drug users. Such a transmission may also occur from mother to baby during pregnancy or at birth. Saliva, tears, urine, feces, and sweat do not appear to transmit the virus.

By the end of 2002 it was estimated that 42 million people were infected with HIV worldwide, the great majority in Third World countries; some 25 million had died from AIDS. The disease in sub-Saharan Africa, which has been especially hard hit, in the main has been transmitted heterosexually and has been exacerbated by civil wars and refugee problems and less restrictive local mores with regard to sex. Some 29 million people were infected with HIV in this region, where, in many countries, the prevalence of AIDS has lowered the life expectancy. The epidemic also has manifested itself in Asia (especially in India, China, Myanmar, Thailand, and Cambodia) and Latin America.

In the United States, the demographics of AIDS have changed over time. In the 1980s it was seen mainly in homosexual and bisexual men and was one of the spurs to the gay-rights movement, as activists lobbied for research and treatment monies and began education and prevention programs. Also in the early years, before careful screening of blood products was deemed necessary, the virus was contracted by an estimated 9,000 hemophiliacs (see hemophilia), and a small number of people were infected by surgical or emergency blood transfusions. Before long, however, the majority of new HIV infections were seen in drug users who contracted the disease from shared needles or unprotected sex. A large proportion of infected women are drug users or partners of drug users. Nearly a third of the infants born to HIV-infected women are infected with the virus. (Some of these infants test positive for AIDS only because of the mother's antibodies and later test negative.)

Tests and Treatment

Various blood tests now are used to detect HIV. The most frequently used test for detecting antibodies to HIV-1 is enzyme immunoassay. If it indicates the presence of antibodies, the blood is more definitively tested with the Western blot method. A test that measures directly the viral genes in the blood is helpful in assessing the efficacy of treatments.

There is no cure for AIDS. Drugs such as AZT, ddI, and 3TC, which are reverse transcriptase inhibitors, have proved effective in delaying the onset of symptoms in certain subsets of infected individuals. The addition of a protease inhibitor, such as saquinovir, amprenavir, or atazanavir, to AZT and 3TC has proved very effective, but the drug combination does not eliminate the virus from the body. Efavirenz (Sustiva), another type of reverse transcriptase inhibitor, must be taken with protease inhibitors or older AIDS medicines. Opportunistic infections are treated with various antibiotics and antivirals, and patients with malignancies may undergo chemotherapy. These measures may prolong life or improve the quality of life, but drugs for AIDS treatment may also produce painful or debilitating side effects.

Some 30 experimental AIDS vaccines have been developed and tested, but none has yet proved clearly effective, including one that underwent full-scale testing. The development of a successful vaccine against AIDS has been slowed because HIV mutates rapidly, causing it to become unrecognizable to the immune system, and because, unlike most viruses, HIV attacks and destroys essential components of the very immune system a vaccine is designed to stimulate.

Governments and the pharmaceutical industry continue to be under pressure from AIDS activists and the public in general to find a cure for AIDS. Attempts at prevention through teaching "safe sex" (i.e., the relatively safer sex accomplished by the use of condoms), sexual abstinence in high-risk situations, and the dangers to drug users of sharing needles have been impeded by those who feel that such education gives license to promiscuity and immoral behaviors.

Bibliography

See S. Sontag, AIDS and Its Metaphors (1989); S. Flanders, AIDS (1991); G. Corea, The Story of Women and AIDS (1992), publications of Gay Men's Health Crisis, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Aids in Medicine  - 20006 results

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...Action on AIDS: National Policies in Comparative...editors Medicine and Money...Approach to AIDS Intervention...Education in the Twentieth...GOLDEN WAND OF MEDICINE...the god of medicine and six made...Hermes, usually in conjunction...dictionaries are aids in discovering...
...Caduceus Symbol in Medicine Walter J...Ball The AIDS Pandemic: Social...Literature Influences Medicine E. M. Papper...Diseases and HIV/AIDS in Asia and the...Ayurvedic and folk medicine in India. 38...treatment of AIDS by traditional...
...Research on AIDS in Africa...Science and Medicine 33 (1991...Differences in Susceptibility to AIDS: An Evolutionary...Science and Medicine 28 (1989...Underreaction to AIDS in Sub-Saharan...Science and Medicine 34 (1992...
...conferences of the AIDS History Group...History of Medicine held at Bethesda in 1989 and...centrally into the AIDS picture, the...prominent in English medicine bore the...Mirko Grmek in his history of AIDS, The grandeur of modern medicine--its highs...
...significant story in science and medicine. Television...been covering AIDS since late...of modern medicine. Moreover, AIDS was a crisis...the increase in cases was...practices in treating AIDS patients...of orthodox medicine to treat...
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Coverage of AIDS in Popular African American Magazines...first CDC-sponsored national conference, "AIDS in the Minority Communities" ( Jenkins...the mainstream media failed to cover AIDS in the African American community in a consistent...
...resource allocation in United States AIDS drug assistance programs...Social Science and Medicine, 52, 481-491. Sember...England Journal of Medicine, 344, 1764-1772. Shilts...quarter-century mark: AIDS coverage and research...Critical Studies in Mass Communication...
...informs the people in South Africa about HIV/AIDS, says: The people believe that the infected...accounts for the death of millions of people in Africa since the mid-eighties." (Deutsches...People trust more in her work than in modern medicine... The anthropologist Susanne Leclerc-Madlala...
...use this medicine for...one of the AIDS carriers...not factor in the etiology...Anthropology of Medicine and Everyday...Churches: HIV/AIDS in Papua New...Concept of Flow in Rwandan Popular Medicine. Social Science...A. 1999. AIDS, Homophobia...
...Parascandola (eds), AIDS and the public...volumes, each in a different...history of medicine and health...history of medicine and health...making for the AIDS/HIV epidemic in any country...policy for AIDS was increasingly...applauded in both the UK...clinical medicine, and journalism...
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...the members of the consensus panel on HIV/AIDS Education and Teacher Preparation for their expertise in a wide range of areas including social foundations...Frederick, associate professor, Department of Medicine, Howard University Hospital; and Janeen Witty...
The Church AIDS in Africa: Condoms the Culture...second-guess myself. In practicing medicine such self-criticism is warranted...that is woefully inadequate. In medicine, partial therapy is at best...if women had rights, if AIDS did not kill, perhaps the...
...drugs. He has called AIDS a disease of poverty...cramped conditions in slums, evident hunger, and lack of medicine all cry out for...getting antiviral medicine for a while after she contracted AIDS during surgery...dropped a lawsuit in South Africa aimed...
...Tuskeegee study, in which black men infected...fear of mainstream medicine. McMaster says this...Americans to believe that AIDS was created by scientists...acupuncture--over Western medicines due to uncertainty...Federal agencies, in particular can sustain...report, the National AIDS Commission recommended...
...the most destructive characteristics of AIDS: stigma. Women who have received anti-retroviral...treatment have been known to crush and hide the medicine under the bed so that no packaging or pills could be traced to them. A study conducted in 2002 demonstrated that upon disclosing...
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...generous intervention on AIDS is making great and meaningful inroads in Africa, enabling antiretroviral...witnessed: food with the medicine. Its a prescription...and Treatment of HIV/AIDS in Kenya (AMPATH) - which...University School of Medicine. It provides antiretroviral...
...explained that the king was alarmed by the rise in infections. "His Majesty King Mswati III...as Uganda, for models of combating HIV/AIDS," the ambassador said. "The notion of abstain...being tested for HIV and are receiving medicine from the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis...
...scholarship to study HIV/AIDS prevention in Malaysia. Sae-Rom...Admissions initiative in medicine, she will defer her...misinformed regarding HIV/AIDS prevention." Chae credits her interest in public service and...involved in the Youth in Medicine program and eventually...
9/11 Method Aids in Katrina ID; Volunteers Rely on DNA Tests. Byline: Jennifer Harper...The effort, she said, "is bridging the gap between genetic and forensic medicine to help make our country better prepared to deal with a massive disaster...
Minorities needing transplants find ally: Group aids in searches for organ donors by Yvonne J. Medley...chairman of Howards Department of Surgery in the College of Medicine, attended the daylong celebration in Chicago. Across...
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AIDS , in medicine or acquired immunodeficiency syndrome...effective in delaying the onset of symptoms in certain subsets of infected individuals...taken with protease inhibitors or older AIDS medicines. Highly active antiretroviral therapy...
THRUSH , in medicine in medicine, infection caused by the fungus Candida...of this fungus results when the balance in the normal oral microbe population is disturbed...therapy. It is often an early symptom of AIDS . Treatment is with antifungal drugs, such...
...group, has been linked with a number of human cancers, including the lymphomas that often occur in immunosuppressed people, such as people with AIDS . Several human papillomaviruses (HPV) have also been shown to initiate cancers. For example...
...molecular genetics and leading to a continuing revolution in modern medicine. Much medical research is now directed toward such problems as cancer , heart disease, AIDS , reemerging infectious diseases such as tuberculosis...
...ginkgo ). Some people have used botanicals in an attempt to stave off serious illnesses such as AIDS. This widespread use has prompted demands...Debate over botanicals validity and safety as medicines and over the appropriate degree of government...
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