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People have been warned about HIV and AIDS for over twenty
years now. AIDS has already killed millions of people,
millions more continue to become infected with HIV, and
there's no cure – so AIDS will be around for a while yet.
AIDS is one of biggest problems facing the world today and
nobody is beyond its reach. Everyone should know the basic
facts about AIDS.
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What is AIDS?
AIDS is a medical condition. People develop AIDS because HIV
has damaged their natural defences against disease.
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What is HIV?
HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus)
HIV is a virus. Viruses infect the cells that make up the
human body and replicate (make new copies of themselves)
within those cells. A virus can also damage human cells,
which is one of the things that can make a person ill. HIV
can be passed from one person to another. Someone can become
infected with HIV through contact with the bodily fluids of
someone who already has HIV. HIV stands for the 'Human
Immunodeficiency Virus'. Someone who is diagnosed as
infected with HIV is said to be 'HIV+' or 'HIV positive'.
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Why is HIV dangerous?
The immune system is a group of cells and organs that
protect your body by fighting disease. The human immune
system usually finds and kills viruses fairly quickly.
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So if the body's immune system
attacks and kills viruses, what's the problem?
Different viruses attack different parts of the body - some
may attack the skin, others the lungs, and so on. The common
cold is caused by a virus. What makes HIV so dangerous is
that it attacks the immune system itself - the very thing
that would normally get rid of a virus. It particularly
attacks a special type of immune system cell known as a CD4
lymphocyte.
HIV has a number of tricks that help it to evade the body's
defences, including very rapid mutation. This means that
once HIV has taken hold, the immune system can never fully
get rid of it.
There isn't any way to tell just by looking if someone's
been infected by HIV. In fact a person infected with HIV may
look and feel perfectly well for many years and may not know
that they are infected. But as the person's immune system
weakens they become increasingly vulnerable to illnesses,
many of which they would previously have fought off easily.
The only reliable way to tell whether someone has HIV is for
them to take a blood test, which can detect infection from a
few weeks after the virus first entered the body.
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When HIV causes AIDS ?
A damaged immune system is not only more vulnerable to
HIV, but also to the attacks of other infections. It won't
always have the strength to fight off things that wouldn't
have bothered it before.
As time goes by, a person who has been infected with HIV is
likely to become ill more and more often until, usually
several years after infection, they become ill with one of a
number of particularly severe illnesses. It is at this point
that they are said to have AIDS - when they first become
seriously ill, or when the number of immune system cells
left in their body drops below a particular point. Different
countries have slightly different ways of defining the point
at which a person is said to have AIDS rather than HIV.
AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome) is an
extremely serious condition, and at this stage the body has
very little defence against any sort of infection.
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How long does HIV take to become
AIDS?
Without drug treatment, HIV infection usually progresses
to AIDS in an average of ten years. This average, though, is
based on a person having a reasonable diet. Someone who is
malnourished may well progress to AIDS and death more
rapidly.
Antiretroviral medication can prolong the time between HIV
infection and the onset of AIDS. Modern combination therapy
is highly effective and, theoretically, someone with HIV can
live for a long time before it becomes AIDS. These
medicines, however, are not widely available in many poor
countries around the world, and millions of people who
cannot access medication continue to die.
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How is HIV passed on?
HIV is found in the blood and the sexual fluids of an
infected person, and in the breast milk of an infected
woman. HIV transmission occurs when a sufficient quantity of
these fluids get into someone else's bloodstream. There are
various ways a person can become infected with HIV.
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Ways in which you can be infected
with HIV :
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Unprotected sexual intercourse with an infected
person Sexual intercourse without a condom is risky,
because the virus, which is present in an infected
person's sexual fluids, can pass directly into the body of
their partner. This is true for unprotected vaginal and
anal sex. Oral sex carries a lower risk, but again HIV
transmission can occur here if a condom is not used - for
example, if one partner has bleeding gums or an open cut,
however small, in their mouth.
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Contact with an infected person's blood If
sufficient blood from an infected person enters someone
else's body then it can pass on the virus.
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From mother to child HIV can be transmitted
from an infected woman to her baby during pregnancy,
delivery and breastfeeding. There are special drugs that
can greatly reduce the chances of this happening, but they
are unavailable in much of the developing world.
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Use
of infected blood products Many people in the
past have been infected with HIV by the use of blood
transfusions and blood products which were contaminated
with the virus - in hospitals, for example. In much of the
world this is no longer a significant risk, as blood
donations are routinely tested.
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Injecting drugs People who use injected drugs
are also vulnerable to HIV infection. In many parts of the
world, often because it is illegal to possess them,
injecting equipment or works are shared. A tiny amount of
blood can transmit HIV, and can be injected directly into
the bloodstream with the drugs.
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a Project by
SunnyZ World ,
Kolhapur |
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