Most people with HIV who have an undetectable viral load can reach the normal range and often it is only a matter of time. If you are living with HIV, a CD4 count above 350 can significantly improve ...
The decrease in CD4 cells during HIV infection seems to be driven by immune activation, which does not always correlate with viral load. Experienced clinicians are all too familiar with the ...
Since HIV viral-load testing is the best tool to enable early detection of therapeutic failure, unrecognized virological failure along with selection and accumulation of drug resistance have been ...
The prevalence of liver steatosis was higher in people living with HIV compared with liver fibrosis, although both liver ...
HIV therapy protects the immune system by controlling the virus and preventing disease progression. This article takes a ...
People with HIV who receive treatment can enjoy entirely normal life spans - and outdated ... of her weakened immune system. And her viral load - how much HIV is in the blood - was so high her ...
NHL can happen more quickly when you have a weakened immune system, so people with HIV are more likely to get it. You can live a normal life with HIV. With your doctor’s help and advice ...
The sex of people living with HIV-1 infection, schistosome infection, or both, is a fundamental determinant of their clinical ...
Highly effective treatments for HIV have existed since the mid-1990s. But while these treatments keep people healthy, we do not yet have a safe and scalable way to completely rid the body of the virus ...
As the science stands, the vast majority of the roughly eight million people in South Africa living with HIV will have to get ...
This significantly impairs viral clearance which may affect the course ... to children living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in sub-Saharan Africa could be an ...
The Human Sciences Research Council (HSRC) released the key findings of the Sixth South African HIV Prevalence, Incidence, and Behaviour Survey (SABSSM VI) across the country. The SABSSM VI survey ...