Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is caused by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). HIV and AIDS attack a person's immune system and causes them to become sick with opportunistic infections. Treatment can slow the progression of HIV...
The HIV virus slowly infects cells in the body's immune and central nervous system, ravaging the immune system over time to the point that the body is unable to fight back. The medical and scientific communities organize HIV infection into four...
Medications are one of the most commonly used treatment modalities available to modern medicine. Diseases that were once though incurable are now treated and cured with drug regimens. The human immunodeficiency virus--the virus that causes...
HIV, or the human immunodeficiency virus, is a sexually transmitted virus that spreads by contact with infected semen, vaginal fluids, blood or during childbirth or breastfeeding. AIDS is a chronic syndrome caused by HIV, in which your immune...
Acquired immune deficiency syndrome, AIDS, is caused by the human immunodeficiency virus, HIV. AIDS is an infectious and deadly disease that can be spread through sexual contact, infected blood and mother to child transmission. There is no cure...
As of 2010, there is no recommended vaccine to prevent human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV) infection, and many challenges remain for developing a vaccine. HIV is the infectious organism, which leads to acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS);...
Human immunodeficiency virus, or HIV, is a type of retrovirus that replaces normal cellular DNA with its own viral genetic material, causing progressive damage to the body's immune system. HIV infection can eventually lead to the life-threatening...
The human immunodeficiency virus, HIV, infects many cells of the immune system eventually leading to the development of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, or AIDS. There is no cure for AIDS; however anti-retroviral treatment markedly reduces the...
Whether in developing or developed countries, the world's more than 2.1 million HIV-positive children are likelier to survive and thrive with good nutritional support. With access to proper food and health care, many can even live into adulthood....
Retroviruses are a family of viruses characterized by the presence of RNA genetic material and a special enzymatic protein known as reverse transcriptase. The human immunodeficiency virus, or HIV, is the most clinically significant human...
Cholesterol is a fat-like substance that circulates in the bloodstream. It helps compose cells, hormones, vitamins, and digestive enzymes in the body. Although cholesterol is an integral element of the human body, elevated cholesterol levels,...
Human immunodefiency virus infection has no cure. However, the anti-HIV (antiretroviral) drugs that are prescribed to treat this infection can prolong the life of an infected individual by decades. The U.S. Department of Health recommends anti-HIV...
Gynecomastia is the term used to describe the enlargement of breasts in men or boys. True gynecomastia is defined by growth of actual breast tissue, not growth of fat tissue in the breast area. Imbalance of the sex hormones testosterone and...
The first drug to treat and manage HIV infection and AIDS was approved in 1987, and today, more than 20 antiretroviral, or anti-HIV, drugs are available, according to 2009 information from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. However, it is...