HIV Flashcards
1
Q
what is the relevance of HIV globally and in the UK?
A
- still millions of people infected (largest HIV burden is in africa)
- substantially fewer deaths in UK due to HIV
- can develop to AIDs
2
Q
what is the structure of HIV?
A
HIV is single stranded RNA retrovirus
3
Q
what is the lifecycle of HIV?
A
- free virus
- binding and fusion: gp120 portion of envelope binds to CD4 receptor found on T cell surface allowing virus to fuse with cell
- infection: virus penetrates cell and empties contents into cell
- reverse transcription: single stranded RNA concverted to double stranded DNA. by reverse transcriptase
- integration: viral DNA is combined with the cells own DNA by integrase
- transcription: infected cell divides and viral DNA is read making long protein chains
- assembly: sets of viral protein chains come together
- budding: immature virus pushes out of cell taking some cell membrane with it
- immature virus breaks free of infected cell
- maturation: protein chains are cut by protease and make a new working virus
4
Q
what does a CD4 count below 200 indicate?
A
HIV progression to AIDS
5
Q
what factors affect HIV transmission?
A
- type of exposure: type of sexual contact, transfusion vs needlestick
- breaks in skin or mucosa: other STI, sexual assault
- viral level in blood
6
Q
how is HIV treated?
A
ASAP with anti-retroviral drugs: 3 ARVs used
* target the receptors involved in allowing enterance of virus into cell
* targets integrase
* targets protease
7
Q
why are 3 ARVs given to treat HIV?
A
- millions of rounds of viral replication each day
- virus mutates every 2-3 rounds which means resistance to drug increases each day
3 drugs reduces chance of developing resistance
8
Q
what are ways of preventing HIV?
A
- promote condom usage
- male circumcision
- wide spread testing
- post expose prophylaxis
- pre exposure prophylaxis