What is HIV?
HIV stands for human immunodeficiency virus. HIV was originally isolated in Paris in May 1983 by Luc Montagnier and belongs to a group of viruses called retroviruses.
Viruses copy their genetic material into the genetic material of human cells. This means that infected cells stay infected for the rest of their lives.
Through mechanisms that are still not fully understood, HIV prevents the immune system from working properly. Normally, the body's immune system would fight off infection. However, HIV is able to infect CD4 T-cells, key cells that coordinate the immune system's fight against infection. Many CD4 T-cells are actually destroyed by being infected; others, including CD4 T-cells which are not themselves infected, no longer work properly.
latest aidsmap news
- 'ART as prevention tool' policy announced for British Columbia
- <i>The Lancet</i>: HIV is a global disaster
- Important changes to nevirapine dosing advice made by FDA
- Fatty liver in patients with HIV associated with metabolic abnormalities
- Most HIV infections in Zambia and Rwanda happen in marriage: prevention programmes for couples recommended
- HIV-positive Caribbean people in the UK experience high levels of stigma
- Poverty and unemployment common amongst HIV-positive Londoners
- Risk of death for people with HIV now similar to that seen in the general population
- Simple, cheap test an accurate measure of hardening of the arteries in patients with HIV
- Asymptomatic anal HPV infection more common than thought in heterosexual men
