HIV (Human Immunodeficency
Virus) is a virus which attacks the body's immune system. For a certain period
of time, which may be several years, the body's defence mechanism will keep the
HIV infection under control. During this time, a person with HIV may feel
completely well and have no symptoms. However, in the majority of cases, the
immune system eventually needs help, in the form of anti-HIV drugs, to keep the
HIV infection under control.
Although you may still
hear the term AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrom) it is no longer used by
doctors. They prefer to talk of late-stage of advanced HIV infection. Before
effective treatments, AIDS was a state some infected with HIV almost inevitably
entered as HIV attacked their immune system. This is no longer the case.
2 How is HIV transmitted?
In order for someone to
become infected, a sufficient amount of HIV must enter their bloodstream. This
level of HIV is found in some, but not all of the body fluids of someone
infected with HIV. Those body fluids which contain enough HIV to infect someone
are:
·
blood
·
sperm and seminal fluid
·
vaginal fluids, including menstrual fluids
·
breast milk
Other body fluids like
saliva, sweat or urine do not contain enough virus to infect another person.
There are a number of
routes, all quite difficult to achieve by accident, by which infectious body
fluids from someone with HIV may enter the bloodstream of someone else:
·
Directly into the bloodstream; for example, via a puncture caused
by injection equipment.
·
Via an organ transplant or blood transfusion.
·
Through the internal surface (mucous membrane) of the rectum,
vagina, cervix or urethra.
HIV cannot pass though
intact external skin. It cannot pass through the air like a cold or flu virus.
HIV and sex
HIV can pass from an
infected person to an uninfected person during unprotected penetrative sexual
intercourse; that is, sex where the penis, unprotected by a condom, enters the
vagina or anus.
Using a condom with a
water-based lubricant or a femidom during vaginal or anal penetrative sex will
prevent transmission of HIV and many other sexually transmitted diseases.
HIV and sexual intercourse
between men
Up until recently, in the
UK, Northern Europe and parts of the United States, the most serious impact of
the virus has been felt by gay en. Thirty four percent of men in the UK who were
infected by HV before the end of 2002 were infected through sexual intercourse
with other men.
HIV and sexual intercourse
between men and women
The number of people
becoming infected through unprotected heterosexual sex is increasing. In 2002,
in the UK, 63 per cent of all people infected with HIV became infected during
unprotected sex with someone of the opposite sex who had HIV.
Unlike the UK, USA and
Northern Europe, in Asia and sub-Saharan Africa, HIV is transmitted most
frequently by sexual intercourse between men and women. In the UK, HIV has had a
devastating effect on communities of people from parts of Africa where HIV had
taken hold.
HIV and oral sex
It is possible for HIV to
be transmitted through oral sex. As far as we know, sucking on the penis of a
man with HIV is the type of oral sex most likely to lead to transmission of HIV.
Although there is enough virus in semen to infect another person, it is
difficult for the virus to survive in the mouth, and it is difficult for the
virus to get from the mouth into the blood stream.
Licking the labia or
clitoris of a woman with HIV is less risky than oral sex with a man who has HIV.
Someone whose genitals are
sucked or licked by a person with HIV is less likely to become infected. But a
small number of cases of infection through this route are known.
HIV and other sexual
activities
One sexual activity which
is risky if one partner has HIV, is sharing a sex toy. That is, inserting the
object into the vagina or anus of more than one person without washing it
carefully between users or putting a clean condom on it between users.
It is hard for HIV to be
passed from one person to another through: deep kissing, mutual masturbation, or
via fingers inserted into the vagina or anus, unless covered in blood or other
infectious fluids.
HIV and shared injection
equipment
In 2002, in the UK, 2 per
cent of those who became infected with HIV did so through sharing drug injecting
equipment with someone with HIV. Sharing injecting equipment is as risky as
having unprotected sex with someone who has HIV. In Scotland, Southern Europe
and parts of the USA, shared drug injecting equipment is the most common route
of infection.
People who inject drugs
can avoid transmitting HIV and other viruses present in the blood, either to
themselves or to others, by using new injecting equipment every time, or by
sterilizing equipment between users.
To combat the spread of
HIV and other viruses among people who inject drugs through contaminated
injecting equipment, many countries have initiated needle exchange programmes.
That is, making available free clean injecting equipment to people who inject
drugs.
HIV and blood transfusions
Early in the epidemic, a
number of people in the UK were infected with HIV through blood transfusions.
However, all blood donations and tissue donations in the UK have been tested for
HIV since 1985. In some countries, infection through blood transfusion is still
a significant rist.
Haemophilia
Factor 8 is a product of
donated blood which is used by people who have haemophilia. Before it was known
the donated blood might contain HIV, many people with haemophilia became
infected in the UK through receiving contaminated blood products. All blood
products are now treated to destroy and HIV which may be present.
HIV and pregnancy
A woman with HIV, who
becomes pregnant can sometimes transmit the virus to her baby before or during
birth (vertical transmission). HIV can also be passed to a baby during
breastfeeding if the mother has HIV. In the ansence of any preventative
interventions, the risk of vertical transmission is about one in seven.
This risk can be greatly
reduced if the pregnant woman is given a short course of an anti-HIV drug,
starting a few weeks before the birth and continuted, to both mother and new
born, for a short period after the birth (The most effective anti-HIV drugs to
be given to the mother before birth, and how long she should take them are both
areas of current research activity). The other two interventions which greatly
reduce the risk of vertical transmission are: delivering the new born by elected
Caesarean section and avoiding breastfeeding, as breast milk contains
significant levels of HIV. If these three preventative interventions are
followed, the risk of vertical transmission has been shown to fall to as low as
two in 100.
In the UK in 2002, 57
children were born infected by HIV as a result of vertical transmission.
3 What is the HIV test?
The HIV test shows whether
someone has HIV, the virus that is responsible for what was in the pas called
AIDS. It is not a test for AIDS.
Antibodies
The most commonly
available HIV test is more properly called an HIV antibody test, because it
looks for antibodies to HIV. Antibodies are created by the infected person’s
immune system in response to the presence of HIV.
The window period (seroconversion)
When someone becomes
infected with HIV, it can take up to three months for their immune system to
produce enough antibodies to show up on an HIV test. This gap is called the
window period, or seroconversion. Throughout this window period, the person with
HIV does, however, have enough virus in their blood and sexual fluids (and
breast milk) to infect another person. Indeed, the level of virus in their body
fluids (viral load) at this time can be extremely high, making them particularly
infectious.
Because the HIV test looks
for antibodies, taking an HIV test less than three months after infection might
not give an accurate result.
A positive result
If the test finds HIV
antibodies, the result is said to be positive. You would then be HIV antibody
positive or ‘HIV positive’. This means you have HIV infection. It does not mean
you have AIDS. The test cannot show whether you are ill, or are going to become
ill. For those found to be HIV positive, combination therapy can successfully
reduce the lever of HIV in their blood and has had a dramatic effect in
improving the health of many people with HIV.
A negative result
If the test does not find
HIV antibodies, the result is said to be negative. A negative test result shows
that the person does not have HIV, as long as the test was done after the end of
the window period.
An unclear result
Very occasionally, the HIV
test result can be unclear. It is not clearly positive or negative. In most
cases this is because the test has found some random antibodies which have
nothing to do with HIV. However, very rarely an unclear result can occur during
the window period. This means the person taking the test had HIV but HIV
antibodies are only just beginning to form.
If the HIV test result is
unclear, the clinic may send the blood sample away for further tests. Or you may
be advised to have a repeat HIV test four or six weeks after your unclear
result. In either case, this result is likely to be clearly positive or
negative.
Testing for HIV itself
Another blood test called
an antigen test will find HIV itself (as opposed to antibodies) if it is
present. This test looks for a part of the HIV virus which is detectable in the
body around two or three weeks after infection, but before HIV antibodies have
had time to form. It is not used as widely as the antibody test but may be used
in special circumstances.
4 How does HIV affect the
body?
After a while, HIV will
begin to weaken the body’s immune system, which usually fights off any
infections. The major damage HIV causes to the immune system is to white blood
cells known as CD4 cells, which sets the immune system in motion when organisms
such as viruses, bacteria and fungi enter the body.
HIV infects CF4 cells and
uses them to make new copies of HIV. These copies then go on to infect more
cells. Over time, as the number of healthy CD4 cells declines, the immune system
ability to fight infections can be greatly reduced.
HIV reproduces even in
someone who is feeling well. If their immune system is working well, the virus
will only reproduce a little. But if their immune system is damaged through
prolonged or serious illness, the virus can reproduce itself much more easily.
Research shows that people with higher levels of HIV in their bodies have a
greater risk of becoming ill than people with less HIV in their bodies.
What are the long term
effects of HIV?
The CD3 cells of someone
infected with HIV mount a defence against the invading HIV and it may be held at
bay for many years. But the virus is not completely destroyed or eliminated from
the body, and it continues to attack CD4 cells. Eventually, the number of CD4
cells declines and the amount of virus present increases.
When the number of CD4
cells starts to decline, the infected person becomes vulnerable to other
infections. The organisms which cause these infections are easily kept under
control by a healthy immune system. They are able to cause illness only when the
immune system is severely damage, so the illnesses they cause are known as
opportunistic infections. Examples of opportunistic infections include:
·
Pneumocistis carinii pneumonia (PCP), a rare from of pneumonia.
·
Cytomegalovirus (CMV), a type of herpes which can cause blindness
and serious gastrointestinal, brain and lung problems in people with HIV.
· The immune system
also keeps the uncontrolled growth of cells under control and if is damaged,
opportunistic cancer can arise.
Research has shown that
taking a combination of anti-HIV drugs (combination therapy) can slow down the
damaging effect of HIV on the immune system. When combination therapy is
successful, it can improve and sustain the health of someone with HIV and will
mean they are less likely to develop what were previously known as AIDS-defining
conditions.
How effective is anti-HIV
treatment?
Current therapy can
successfully reduce the level of HIV in blood and has had a dramatic effect in
improving the health and life expectancy of people with HIV. However, we do not
yet know the long term effects of these drugs or whether the improvement people
are experiencing can be sustained indefinitely.
In the seven years that
these drugs have been available, many who were seriously have returned to good
health and in many cases returned to work. In some people, however, the virus
can develop resistance and cross-resistance to the drugs (cross-resistance means
that the virus becomes resistant to other drugs, whish work in the same way as
the actual drug used). A minority of people are unable to benefit from the
current anti-HIV drugs.
How can you tell if the
treatment is working?
People living with HIV
regularly use two tests to monitor the progress of the infection, and these are
especially important for anyone beginning or using combination therapy. Both
tests involve having blood samples taken.
CD4 count:
a CD4 count measures the number of CD4 cells in the blood. The lower the CD4
count, the more damage the immune system has sustained from HIV infection.
Viral load:
This tests the amount of HIV in the blood. The higher the viral load, the more
virus there is in the blood. One of the aims of combination therapy is to drive
down the viral load and keep it suppressed.
If the measurement of
viral load comes back as ‘undetectable’ this does not mean there is no HIV in
the blood. It means that there are too few particles of virus to be detected by
the test. There are still some there, just not very many. In addition, HIV may
be undetectable in the blood, but there can still be HIV in semen, vaginal
fluids and other bodily fluids. So it is advisable to continue practising safer
sex even with a low viral load, so there is still a risk of HIV transmission.
Can combination therapy
fail?
In order for combination
therapy to work, one needs to continuously maintain a certain level of anti-HIV
drugs in the blood. If this level falls, they will no work effectively and HIV
will continue to reproduce. The level of drugs in the body can fall if someone
regularly forgets to take them on time, misses doses, or doesn’t follow dietary
instructions (that is, if they don’t adhere to the drug regimen).
Someone’s combination
therapy can also fail if HIV infection had damaged the lining of their gut,
which can make it difficult for them to absorb the drugs properly.
Drug resistance
Combination therapy can
also fail because HIV develops resistance to one or more of the drugs in the
combination. HIV can develop resistance by changing (mutating) slightly so that
it can reproduce in spite of these drugs. This new virus can then multiply and
continue to damage the immune system, unless the person changes to another drug
combination which will work against the new strain of HIV in their body.
Such drug-resistant
strains of HIV are now increasingly being transmitted. People who become
infected with durg-resistant HIV will have their treatment options limited from
the start of combination therapy. This emphasizes the importance of practising
safer sex and avoiding infection by drug-resistant strains of HIV.
Does this mean there’s now
a cure for HIV?
No. Despite the hype, at
present these drugs combinations do not completely eliminate HIV from the body,
or suppress HIV to such low levels that it cannot cause longer term damage to
the immune system.
5 What happens when
someone has HIV?
Most people who become
infected with HIV do not notice that they have been infected. A few weeks after
infection, the body’s immune system reacts to the virus by producing
anti-bodies. Some people with HIV have short “seroconversion” illness at the
time these antibodies are created. The likely symptoms are the normal response
to many other infections, and may include a sore throat, a fever or a rash.
Someone living with HIV
will have their CD4 count and viral load regularly monitored by means of simple
blood tests. The results of these tests vary in response to infections, stress,
exercise and the time of day, but it is of primary importance in the indicating
how their health is holding up under the assault of HIV. When someone has lived
with HIV for a long time and their immune system has been severely damaged,
there is a risk of opportunistic infections. Increasingly, it is possible to
prevent or treat these opportunistic infections using drugs. For example,
Pneumocistis carinii pneumonia (PCP was a frequent cause of death in people with
AIDS or late stage infection in the early years of the epidemic. Doctors are now
able to prevent PCP with drugs, or to treat it quickly if it occurs. Death from
PCP is now rare among people with HIV in the uk.
The real problems
Even though there are now
more powerful anti-HIV treatments, which can suppress the progress or HIV
infection, living with the knowledge of a serious and potentially
life-threatening infection can be stressful and difficult. Someone with HIV may
remain in good physical health for many years but misunderstandings and fears
about HIV are still widespread in society. People living with the virus may
encounter hostility or rejection even from friends and family. Some have lost
jobs and homes due to their employers’ or landlords’ attitudes, and children
with HIV have been banned from school.
Many people with HIV have
seen friends and partners become ill before them, and may have seen them die.
Some communities have been particularly affected by HIV; for example, gay men,
people from sub-Saharan Africa and injecting drug-users. In some parts of the
world, and among some African communities in the UK, it is not unusual for whole
families to die from HIV.
Many HIV positive people
choose to tell no one about their diagnosis except for a few trusted friends,
and this burden of secrecy can be very hard to bear. Living with the knowledge
that you could pass a serious infection to someone else can also be very hard. A
number of support groups have been set up around the country to help counter the
isolation which HIV can cause and to help people make changes in their lives to
cope with living with HIV
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