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Human Immunodeficiency Virus

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Human Immunodeficiency Virus, infectious agent that causes acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), a disease that leaves a person vulnerable to life-threatening infections. Scientists have identified two types of this virus. HIV-1 is the primary cause of AIDS worldwide. HIV-2 is found mostly in West Africa. HIV belongs to the retrovirus family of viruses.

HIV transmission occurs when a person is exposed to body fluids infected with the virus, such as blood, semen, vaginal secretions, and breast milk. The primary modes of HIV transmission are:

  1. sexual relations with an infected person;
  2. sharing hypodermic needles or accidental pricking by a needle contaminated with infected blood; and
  3. transfer of the virus from an infected mother to her baby during birth or through breast-feeding.

When HIV enters the body, it infects lymphocytes, white blood cells of the immune system. The virus commandeers the genetic material of the host cell, instructing the cell to replicate more viruses. The newly formed viruses break free from the host, destroying the cell in the process. The new viruses go on to infect and destroy other lymphocytes.

Over a period that may last from a few months to up to 15 years, HIV may destroy enough lymphocytes that the immune system becomes unable to function properly. An infected person develops multiple life-threatening illnesses from infections that normally do not cause illnesses in people with a healthy immune system. Some people who have HIV infection may not develop any of the clinical illnesses that define the full-blown disease of AIDS for ten years or more. Doctors prefer to use the term AIDS for cases where a person has reached the final, life-threatening stage of HIV infection.

 
 
 
 
 
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