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News :
AIDS Virus getting mutated for good:
Dr. Eric Artz and team from the Institute
of Tropical Medicine has published the results of the
work in the journal AIDS, in which they have said that
the HIV virus has become less pathogenic due to reduced
multiplication
rate and is now more sensitive to anti-retroviral drugs
compared to the strains in late 1980s.
The research team compared
the HIV samples collected in between 1986-89 with the
samples collected during 2002-03. The researchers compared
12 samples from each time period and found that there
is a difference in multiplication as well as in the
sensitivity to the drugs. The researchers though accept
that their work is a preliminary work but still could
reveal new insights into pathogenicity of the virus.
The researchers feel that the virus may still have the
pathogenicity and cause death in the humans, but they
feel that the virus is forming an equilibrium with the
human body for a longer survival in the body and in
an other 50 to 60 years the virus may loose its pathogenicity
and may become non virulent.
Dr. Marco Vitoria from
WHO, feels that HIV is trying to survive for more years
in the human body by becoming less virulent so that
it can survive by forming a commensalisms with the human
body, but cautioned that this report published is just
a preliminary study so people and high risk patients
should not get in to any conclusions based on the report.
Though this study
reports increased sensitivity pattern to drug and reduced
multiplication shown by the virus there are other study
reports showing the increased resistance pattern of
HIV virus.
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