HIV/AIDS and TB (Chapter 10) Flashcards
What does AIDS stand for?
Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome
What is the pathogen of AIDS?
HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus)
What are the three methods of transmission of HIV?
1) sexual intercourse through semen and vaginal fluids
2) transmission of infected blood (e.g. through blood donation and the sharing of needles used by intravenous drug users)
3) mother to foetus across the placenta and through mixing of blood during birth
What are the sites of action of HIV?
T helper lymphocytes, macrophages, brain cells
What are the symptoms of HIV and AIDS?
HIV - flu-like symptoms then symptomless
AIDS - opportunistic infections (e.g. TB, Karposi’s sarcoma, pneumonia, malaria) and weight loss, diarrhoea
What kind of virus is HIV?
A retrovirus - it has RNA not DNA
What happens when HIV infects?
1) once inside a host cell, the viral RNA is converted to DNA to be incorporated into human chromosomes
2) the virus infects and destroys cells of the body’s immune system (helper T cells) so that their numbers gradually decrease
3) when the numbers of cells are low, the body is unable to defend itself against infection, ∴ allowing a rang of pathogens to cause a variety of opportunistic infections
What is AIDS?
A collection of opportunistic disease associated with immunodeficiency cause by a HIV infection
What is the only way that transmission of HIV is possible?
Through direct exchange of bodily fluids
How can HIV spread more easily?
Having multiple sex partners
Why may someone not have any symptoms of HIV until years later?
HIV is a slow virus
When is a person HIV+?
When they appear not to develop any initial symptoms except flu-like symptoms for several weeks after becoming infected
What is the difference between AIDS in developed and developing countries?
Most likely causes of death of people with AIDS:
Developed countries - cancers of internal organs, dementia
Developing countries: malnutrition, malaria and TB
Why does AIDS have an adverse effect on the economic development of countries?
1) it affects sexually active people in their 20s and 30s who are the most economically productive
2) the purchase of expensive drugs drains government funds
How is HIV/AIDS treated?
- There is no cure for AIDS and no vaccine for HIV
- Drug therapy can slow down the onset of AIDS significantly e.g. zidovudine which binds to the viral enzyme reverse transcriptase and blocks its action - but drugs are expensive and have side effects
- Combination drug therapy