HIV and AIDS NOTES
HIV and AIDS NOTES
HIV and AIDS NOTES
SPREAD OF HIV
HIV is pasted from an infected person to an uninfected person and also infected
person.
This happens when a person with HIV gets his/her blood, semen, vaginal fluids, breast
milk inside another person’s body.
There is no risk of getting HIV from the persons urine, sweat, saliva or vomits unless
there is also blood in it.
A person of any age, sex, ethnic group, religion, economic background or sexual
orientation can get HIV.
Sexual orientation, gay, lesbian etc.
It is not who you are, it is what you do that puts you at a risk.
Any one who shares needles or has unprotected sexual intercourse with some one who
has HIV is at a very high risk of getting infection.
A mother with HIV can also pass the virus to her baby (3 ways)
During pregnancy stage
During delivery
During breast feeding
It is not possible to tell if people have HIV by looking at them
People can have HIV for many years not knowing they have it
They can also pass it to others without knowing it. That’s why its important to get
tested.
People with HIV who look and feel health or have very low / undetectable levels of
virus can still pass HIV to others.
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Fever.
Chills.
Fatigue.
Sore throat.
Muscle aches.
Night sweats.
Rash.
Swollen lymph nodes.
These symptoms will go away without treatment but HIV stays in the blood where it will
grow and begin to destroy the immune system
TREATMENT
There is no cure for HIV infection. It is treated with antiretroviral drugs, which stop the virus
from replicating in the body.
Current antiretroviral therapy (ART) does not cure HIV infection but allows a person’s
immune system to get stronger. This helps them to fight other infections. ART must be taken
every day for the rest of a person’s life.
ART lowers the amount of the virus in a person’s body. This stops symptoms and allows
people to live a full and healthy life. People living with HIV who are taking ART and who
have no evidence of virus in the blood will not spread the virus to their sexual partners.
Pregnant women with HIV should have access to and take ART as soon as possible. This
protects the health of the mother and will help prevent HIV from passing to the fetus before
birth, or to the baby through breast milk.
Antiretroviral drugs given to people without HIV can prevent the disease.
When given before possible exposures to HIV it is called pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP)
and when given after an exposure it is called post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP). People can
use PrEP or PEP when the risk of contracting HIV is high; people should seek advice from a
clinician when thinking about using PrEP or PEP.
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Advanced HIV disease remains a persistent problem in the HIV response. WHO is
supporting countries to implement the advanced HIV disease package of care to reduce
illness and death. Newer HIV medicines and short course treatments for opportunistic
infections like cryptococcal meningitis are being developed that may change the way people
take ART and prevention medicines, including access to injectable formulations, in the
future.
PREVENTION
HIV is a preventable disease.
Reduce the risk of HIV infection by:
using a male or female condom during sexual intercourse
being tested for HIV and sexually transmitted infections
having a voluntary medical male circumcision
using harm reduction services for people who inject themselves drugs.
Doctors may suggest medicines and medical devices to help prevent HIV, including:
antiretroviral drugs (ARVs), including oral PrEP and long-acting products
dapivirine vaginal rings
injectable long acting cabotegravir.
ARVs can also be used to prevent mothers from passing HIV to their children.
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People taking antiretroviral therapy (ART) and who have no evidence of virus in the blood
will not pass HIV to their sexual partners. Access to testing and ART is an important part of
preventing HIV.
RISK FACTORS
Behaviours and conditions that put people at greater risk of contracting HIV include:
having condomless anal or vaginal sex intercourse;
having another sexually transmitted infection (STI) such as syphilis, herpes,
chlamydia, gonorrhoea and bacterial vaginosis;
engaging in harmful use of alcohol and drugs in the context of sexual behaviour;
sharing contaminated needles, syringes and other injecting equipment and drug
solutions when injecting drugs;
receiving unsafe injections, blood transfusions and tissue transplantation, and medical
procedures that involve unsterile cutting or piercing; and
experiencing accidental needle stick injuries, including among health workers.
OPPORTUNISTIC INFECTIONS
Opportunistic infections that make the person living with AIDS vulnerable to, including:
pneumonia
tuberculosis
oral thrush, a fungal condition in the mouth or throat
herpes virus infection (cytomegalovirus-CMV).
cryptococcal meningitis, a fungal condition in the brain
toxoplasmosis, a brain condition caused by a parasite
cryptosporidiosis, a condition caused by an intestinal parasite
cancer, including Kaposi sarcoma (KS) and lymphoma
LIFE EXPECTANCY
It is a dramatic improvement, due in large part to antiretroviral therapy. With proper
treatment, many people with HIV can expect a normal or near- normal lifespan. Of course,
many things affect life expectancy for a person with HIV. Among them are:
CD4 cell count
viral load
serious HIV-related illnesses, including hepatitis
misusing drugs
smoking
access, adherence, and response to treatment
other health conditions
age
where a person lives also matters
STRUCTURE OF HIV
HIV is a complex RNA virus of the genus lentivirus within the Reoviridae family.
Has two major envelope glycoproteins gp120 and gp41
Two major types of HIV are HIV 1 and HIV 2
The major serological differences reside in the surface protein gp120.
DRAW THE DIAGRAM AND BE ABLE TO LABEL IT.
RNA DISEASES
SARS
AIDS
Influenza
Hepatitis
Common cold
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WHERE DOES HIV COME FROM?
HIV is thought to have occurred after people ate chimps that were carrying the Simian
Immunodeficiency Virus (SIV).
HIV is a type of lentivirus, which means it attacks the immune system. SIV attacks the
immune systems of monkeys and apes in a very similar way. This suggests HIV and SIV are
closely related, and that SIV in monkeys and apes crossed over to humans to become HIV.
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blamed for starting the HIV epidemic, and suffered severe racism, stigma and discrimination
as a result.
WHY DO SOME PEOPLE SAY HIV STARTED IN THE USA IN THE 1980S?
Because this is when people first became aware of HIV, and it was when HIV was officially
recognised as a new health condition. But HIV had actually been around for decades by
then.
In 1981, rare diseases, such as Kaposi's Sarcoma (a rare cancer) and a lung infection called
PCP, were being reported among gay men in New York and California. Scientists began to
suspect that an unidentified infectious 'disease' was the cause.
At first, the ‘disease’ was called all sorts of names relating to the word ‘gay'. It wasn't until
mid-1982 that scientists realised it was also spreading among other populations, such as
haemophiliacs and people who inject drugs. In September that year, they named it Acquired
Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS).
In 1983, scientists at the Pasteur Institute in France identified the virus linked to AIDS,
which they called Lymphadenopathy-Associated Virus (LAV). Scientists at the USA National
Cancer Institute confirmed this virus was the cause of AIDS and called it HTLV-III. LAV and
HTLV-III were later acknowledged to be the same. A few years later, the virus was renamed
as HIV.
The HIV epidemic began with fear, helplessness and death as the world faced a new virus
that preyed on misunderstanding and marginalisation.
Scientific advances have enabled people with access to treatment to live long and healthy
lives with HIV. While advocacy and campaigning have raised awareness and understanding
of what’s possible, and of the inequalities around the world. These continue to make
accessing the tools and information to prevent HIV and the support and treatment to live
healthily a challenge.
IMMUNITY
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VACCINATION
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