HIV
Infection and AIDS
AIDS--acquired immune
deficiency syndrome--was first reported in the
United States in 1981 and has since become a
major worldwide epidemic. AIDS is caused by the
human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). By killing or
impairing cells of the immune system, HIV
progressively destroys the body's ability to
fight infections and certain cancers. Individuals
diagnosed with AIDS are susceptible to
life-threatening diseases called opportunistic
infections, which are caused by microbes that
usually do not cause illness in healthy people.
More than 500,000 cases of
AIDS have been reported in the United States
since 1981, and as many as 900,000 Americans may
be infected with HIV. The epidemic is growing
most rapidly among minority populations and is a
leading killer of African-American males.
According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC), the prevalence of AIDS is
six times higher in African-Americans and three
times higher among Hispanics than among whites.
Transmission
HIV is spread most
commonly by sexual contact with an infected
partner. The virus can enter the body through
the lining of the vagina, vulva, penis,
rectum or mouth during sex.
HIV also is spread
through contact with infected blood. Prior to
the screening of blood for evidence of HIV
infection and before the introduction in 1985
of heat-treating techniques to destroy HIV in
blood products, HIV was transmitted through
transfusions of contaminated blood or blood
components. Today, the risk of acquiring HIV
from such transfusions is extremely small.
HIV frequently is
spread among injection drug users by the
sharing of needles or syringes contaminated
with minute quantities of blood of someone
infected with the virus. However,
transmission from patient to health-care
worker or vice-versa via accidental sticks
with contaminated needles or other medical
instruments is rare.
Women can transmit HIV
to their fetuses during pregnancy or birth.
Approximately one-quarter to one-third of all
untreated pregnant women infected with HIV
will pass the infection to their babies. HIV
also can be spread to babies through the
breast milk of mothers infected with the
virus. If the drug AZT is taken during
pregnancy, the chance of transmitting HIV to
the baby is reduced significantly.
Although researchers
have detected HIV in the saliva of infected
individuals, no evidence exists that the
virus is spread by contact with saliva.
Laboratory studies reveal that saliva has
natural compounds that inhibit the
infectiousness of HIV. Studies of people
infected with HIV have found no evidence that
the virus is spread to others through saliva
such as by kissing. However, the risk of
infection from so-called "deep"
kissing, involving the exchange of large
amounts of saliva, is unknown. Scientists
also have found no evidence that HIV is
spread through sweat, tears, urine or feces.
Studies of families of
HIV-infected people have shown clearly that
HIV is not spread through casual contact such
as the sharing of food utensils, towels and
bedding, swimming pools, telephones or toilet
seats. HIV is not spread by biting insects
such as mosquitoes or bedbugs.
HIV can infect anyone
who practices risky behaviors such as:
- sharing drug
needles or syringes;
- having unprotected
sexual contact with an infected
person or with someone whose HIV
status is unknown.
Having another sexually
transmitted disease such as syphilis, herpes,
chlamydia or gonorrhea appears to make
someone more susceptible to acquiring HIV
infection during sex with an infected
partner.
Early Symptoms
Many people do not
develop any symptoms when they first become
infected with HIV. Some people, however, have
a flu-like illness within a month or two
after exposure to the virus. They may have
fever, headache, malaise and enlarged lymph
nodes (organs of the immune system easily
felt in the neck and groin). These symptoms
usually disappear within a week to a month
and are often mistaken for those of another
viral infection.
More persistent or
severe symptoms may not surface for a decade
or more after HIV first enters the body in
adults, and within two years in children born
with HIV infection. This period of
"asymptomatic" infection is highly
variable. Some people may begin to have
symptoms in as soon as a few months, whereas
others may be symptom-free for more than 10
years. During the asymptomatic period,
however, HIV is actively infecting and
killing cells of the immune system. HIV's
effect is seen most obviously in a decline in
the blood levels of CD4+ T cells (also called
T4 cells)--the immune system's key infection
fighters. The virus initially disables or
destroys these cells without causing
symptoms.
As the immune system
deteriorates, a variety of complications
begins to surface. One of the first such
symptoms experienced by many people infected
with HIV is lymph nodes that remain enlarged
for more than three months. Other symptoms
often experienced months to years before the
onset of AIDS include a lack of energy,
weight loss, frequent fevers and sweats,
persistent or frequent yeast infections (oral
or vaginal), persistent skin rashes or flaky
skin, pelvic inflammatory disease that does
not respond to treatment or short-term memory
loss. Some people develop frequent and severe
herpes infections that cause mouth, genital
or anal sores, or a painful nerve disease
known as shingles. Children may have delayed
development or failure to thrive.
AIDS
The term AIDS applies
to the most advanced stages of HIV infection.
Official criteria for the definition of AIDS
are developed by the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta, Ga.,
which is responsible for tracking the spread
of AIDS in the United States.
In 1993, CDC revised
its definition of AIDS to include all
HIV-infected people who have fewer than 200
CD4+ T cells. (Healthy adults usually have
CD4+ T-cell counts of 1,000 or more.) In
addition, the definition includes 26 clinical
conditions that affect people with advanced
HIV disease. Most AIDS-defining conditions
are opportunistic infections, which rarely
cause harm in healthy individuals. In people
with AIDS, however, these infections are
often severe and sometimes fatal because the
immune system is so ravaged by HIV that the
body cannot fight off certain bacteria,
viruses and other microbes.
Opportunistic
infections common in people with AIDS cause
such symptoms as coughing, shortness of
breath, seizures, dementia, severe and
persistent diarrhea, fever, vision loss,
severe headaches, wasting, extreme fatigue,
nausea, vomiting, lack of coordination, coma,
abdominal cramps, or difficult or painful
swallowing.
Although children with
AIDS are susceptible to the same
opportunistic infections as adults with the
disease, they also experience severe forms of
the bacterial infections to which children
are especially prone, such as conjunctivitis
(pink eye), ear infections and tonsillitis.
People with AIDS are
particularly prone to developing various
cancers such as Kaposi's sarcoma or cancers
of the immune system known as lymphomas.
These cancers are usually more aggressive and
difficult to treat in people with AIDS.
Hallmarks of Kaposi's sarcoma in
light-skinned people are round brown, reddish
or purple spots that develop in the skin or
in the mouth. In dark-skinned people, the
spots are more pigmented.
During the course of
HIV infection, most people experience a
gradual decline in the number of CD4+ T
cells, although some individuals may have
abrupt and dramatic drops in their CD4+
T-cell counts. A person with CD4+ T cells
above 200 may experience some of the early
symptoms of HIV disease. Others may have no
symptoms even though their CD4+ T-cell count
is below 200.
Many people are so
debilitated by the symptoms of AIDS that they
are unable to hold steady employment or do
household chores. Other people with AIDS may
experience phases of intense life-threatening
illness followed by phases of normal
functioning.
A small number of
people initially infected with HIV 10 or more
years ago have not developed symptoms of
AIDS. Scientists are trying to determine what
factors may account for their lack of
progression to AIDS, such as particular
characteristics of their immune systems or
whether they were infected with a less
aggressive strain of the virus or if their
genetic make-up may protect them from the
effects of HIV.
Diagnosis
Because early HIV
infection often causes no symptoms, it is
primarily detected by testing a person's
blood for the presence of antibodies
(disease-fighting proteins) to HIV. HIV
antibodies generally do not reach detectable
levels until one to three months following
infection and may take as long as six months
to be generated in quantities large enough to
show up in standard blood tests.
People exposed to HIV
should be tested for HIV infection as soon as
they are likely to develop antibodies to the
virus. Such early testing will enable them to
receive appropriate treatment at a time when
they are most able to combat HIV and prevent
the emergence of certain opportunistic
infections (see Treatment below).
Early testing also alerts HIV-infected people
to avoid high-risk behaviors that could
spread HIV to others.
HIV testing is done in
most doctors' offices or health clinics and
should be accompanied by counseling.
Individuals can be tested anonymously at many
sites if they have particular concerns about
confidentiality.
Two different types of
antibody tests, ELISA and Western Blot, are
used to diagnose HIV infection. If a person
is highly likely to be infected with HIV and
yet both tests are negative, a doctor may
test for the presence of HIV itself in the
blood. The person also may be told to repeat
antibody testing at a later date, when
antibodies to HIV are more likely to have
developed.
Babies born to mothers
infected with HIV may or may not be infected
with the virus, but all carry their mothers'
antibodies to HIV for several months. If
these babies lack symptoms, a definitive
diagnosis of HIV infection using standard
antibody tests cannot be made until after 15
months of age. By then, babies are unlikely
to still carry their mothers' antibodies and
will have produced their own, if they are
infected. New technologies to detect HIV
itself are being used to more accurately
determine HIV infection in infants between
ages 3 months and 15 months. A number of
blood tests are being evaluated to determine
if they can diagnose HIV infection in babies
younger than 3 months.
Treatment
When AIDS first
surfaced in the United States, no drugs were
available to combat the underlying immune
deficiency and few treatments existed for the
opportunistic diseases that resulted. Over
the past 10 years, however, therapies have
been developed to fight both HIV infection
and its associated infections and cancers.
The Food and Drug
Administration has approved a number of drugs
for the treatment of HIV infection. The first
group of drugs used to treat HIV infection,
called reverse transcriptase (RT) inhibitors,
interrupt an early stage of virus
replication. Included in this class of drugs
are AZT (also known as zidovudine), ddC
(zalcitabine), ddI (dideoxyinosine), d4T
(stavudine), and 3TC (lamivudine). These
drugs may slow the spread of HIV in the body
and delay the onset of opportunistic
infections. Importantly, they do not prevent
transmission of HIV to other individuals.
Non-nucleoside reverse
transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs) such as
delvaridine (Rescriptor) and nevirapine
(Viramune) are also available for use in
combination with other antiretroviral drugs.
More recently, a second
class of drugs has been approved for treating
HIV infection. These drugs, called protease
inhibitors, interrupt virus replication at a
later step in its life cycle. They include
ritonavir (Norvir), saquinivir (Invirase),
indinavir (Crixivan), and nelfinavir
(Viracept). Because HIV can become resistant
to both classes of drugs, combination
treatment using both is necessary to
effectively suppress the virus.
Currently available
antiretroviral drugs do not cure people of
HIV infection or AIDS, however, and they all
have side effects that can be severe. AZT may
cause a depletion of red or white blood
cells, especially when taken in the later
stages of the disease. If the loss of blood
cells is severe, treatment with AZT must be
stopped. DdI can cause an inflammation of the
pancreas and painful nerve damage.
The most common side
effects associated with protease inhibitors
include nausea, diarrhea and other
gastrointestinal symptoms. In addition,
protease inhibitors can interact with other
drugs resulting in serious side effects.
A number of drugs are
available to help treat opportunistic
infections to which people with HIV are
especially prone. These drugs include
foscarnet and ganciclovir, used to treat
cytomegalovirus eye infections, fluconazole
to treat yeast and other fungal infections,
and TMP/SMX or pentamidine to treat Pneumocystis
carinii pneumonia (PCP).
In addition to
antiretroviral therapy, adults with HIV whose
CD4+ T-cell counts drop below 200 are given
treatment to prevent the occurrence of PCP,
which is one of the most common and deadly
opportunistic infections associated with HIV.
Children are given PCP preventive therapy
when their CD4+ T-cell counts drop to levels
considered below normal for their age group.
Regardless of their CD4+ T-cell counts,
HIV-infected children and adults who have
survived an episode of PCP are given drugs
for the rest of their lives to prevent a
recurrence of the pneumonia.
HIV-infected
individuals who develop Kaposi's sarcoma or
other cancers are treated with radiation,
chemotherapy or injections of alpha
interferon, a genetically engineered
naturally occurring protein.
Prevention
Since no vaccine for
HIV is available, the only way to prevent
infection by the virus is to avoid behaviors
that put a person at risk of infection, such
as sharing needles and having unprotected
sex.
Because many people
infected with HIV have no symptoms, there is
no way of knowing with certainty whether a
sexual partner is infected unless he or she
has been repeatedly tested for the virus or
has not engaged in any risky behavior. The
Public Health Service recommends that people
either abstain from sex or protect themselves
by using latex condoms whenever having oral,
anal or vaginal sex with someone they aren't
certain is free of HIV or other sexually
transmitted diseases. Only condoms made of
latex should be used, and water-based
lubricants should be used with latex condoms.
Although some
laboratory evidence shows that spermicides
can kill HIV organisms, scientists are still
evaluating the usefulness of spermicides in
preventing HIV infection.
The risk of HIV
transmission from a pregnant woman to her
fetus is significantly reduced if she takes
AZT during pregnancy, labor and delivery, and
her baby takes it for the first six weeks of
life.
Research
NIAID-supported
investigators are conducting an abundance of
research on HIV infection, including the
development and testing of HIV vaccines and
new therapies for the disease and some of its
associated conditions. More than a dozen HIV
vaccines are being tested in people, and many
drugs for HIV infection or AIDS-associated
opportunistic infections are either in
development or being tested. Researchers also
are investigating exactly how HIV damages the
immune system. This research is suggesting
new and more effective targets for drugs and
vaccines. NIAID-supported investigators also
continue to document how the disease
progresses in different people.
For information about
studies of new HIV therapies, call the AIDS
Clinical Trials Information Service:
1-800-TRIALS-A
1-800-243-7012 (TDD/Deaf Access)
For federally approved
treatment guidelines on HIV/AIDS, call the
HIV/AIDS Treatment Information Service:
1-800-HIV-0440
1-800-243-7012 (TDD/Deaf Access)
NIAID, a
component of the National Institutes of
Health, supports research on AIDS,
tuberculosis and other infectious diseases as
well as allergies and immunology.
Prepared by:
Office of Communications
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases
National Institutes of Health
Bethesda, MD 20892
Public Health
Service
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
May 1997
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