HIV Flashcards

1
Q

What happens if WBC count goes down to <200?

A
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2
Q

What happens if WBC goes down to 200-500 (in H|V)?

A
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3
Q

What are the AIDS defining conditions?

A

AIDS - defining conditions:

  • Recurrent bacterial pneumonia
  • Pneumocystis pneumonia
  • Fungal infections (e.g. candidiasis of oesophagus)
  • Tumours and malignancies

E.g. Kaposi sarcoma (skin lesions) & primary lymphoma of the brain

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4
Q

What antibodies tests would you do in HIV Ix?

A

A) Antibody test: antibodies against HIV

B) Antibody/antigen test: antibodies against HIV and HIV antigen (virus itself)

C) RNA/DNA test: screen for viral RNA -> detects virus directly & DNA -> copies of viral RNA

  • Antibody/antigen test is recommended for screening purposes > better for identifying early infection
  • The other tests are recommended as confirmatory tests (as follow up after positive result of antibody/ antigen test)
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5
Q

What is the aim of anti-retroviral therapy?

A

Antiretroviral therapy (ART)

  • combination of medicines (known as HIV regimen)
  • slow down HIV replication -> help immune system to recover and fight other infections more effectively
  • reduce number of viruses -> viral number is low
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6
Q

General points in treatment with ART

A
  • typical treatment regimen involves taking 2 - 3 of these medication at the same time (not one as with one usually the virus would get resistant; if few drugs given -> virus dies before it becomes resistant)
  • before starting on the treatment -> test to what type of medication a person would be resistant to

(The types of ART act on different steps of viral entry into CD4+ cell/replication pathway)

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7
Q

(6) names of classes of the drugs used as part of ART

A
  • Fusion inhibitors
  • CCR5
  • Nucleoside Reverse Transctiptase Inhibitor
  • non-nucleoside Reverse Transcriptase
  • Integrase Inhibitor
  • Protease Inhibitor
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8
Q

MoA of fusion inhibitors

A

bind to GP120 protein on HIV virus -> virus cannot enter CD4+ cell

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9
Q

MoA of CCR5 antagonist

A

binds to co-receptor on CD4+ cell -> so HIV virus cannot enter the cell

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10
Q

MoA of Nucleoside Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors

A

viral RNA cannot be converted into DNA (that could attach to host’s DNA) -> reverse transcriptase enzyme usually attaches nucleosides together to form a strand -> NRTI attaches itself to nucleosides and prevents other nucleosides to attach to each other

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11
Q

MoA of Non-nucleotide Reverse Transcriptase

A

reverse transcriptase enzyme is prevented directly from acting on RNA (enzyme action inhibitor)

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12
Q

MoA of Integrase Inhibitor

A

enzymes called viral integrase enzymes would attach viral DNA into host DN

-> Integrase inhibitor prevents viral integrase enzyme -> so virus cannot attach itself to the host’s DNA (the main trigger for cellular apoptosis)

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13
Q

MoA of Protease Inhibitor

A

RNA polymerase would transcribe DNA (host + viral) into mRNA to produce proteins in ribosomes and protease enzymes would allow new proteins to be created

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14
Q
A
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