AIDS
- What we all need to know
Did you know?
The Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention estimates that 1
million to 1.2 million U.S. residents are
living with HIV infection, about one-quarter
of whom are unaware of their infection.
Each year, there are about 40,000 new infections.
Of these, about 70 percent are among men
and 30 percent among women.
In India the Indian National AIDS Control
Organization (NACO) estimates that in 2005
the number of people living with HIV was
5.21 million, which is about 0.91% of our
population. These of course refer to officially
reported numbers - the actual numbers are
likely to be much higher. This data suggests
that India has a higher number of people
living with HIV than any other country in
the world.
The truth that stares
in our face is that "HIV infection
is now common in India; exactly what the
prevalence is, is not really known, but
it can be stated without any fear of being
wrong that infection is widespread… it is
spreading rapidly into those segments that
society in India does not recognize as being
at risk. AIDS is coming out of the closet."
It would help if we knew how to deal with
it more effectively so that we could take
precautions.
What does "AIDS"
mean?
AIDS stands for
Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome:
Acquired means you can
get infected with it
Immune Deficiency means a weakness in the
body's system that fights diseases
Syndrome means a group of health problems
that make up a disease.
AIDS is caused by a virus
called HIV, the Human Immunodeficiency Virus.
If you get infected with HIV, your body
will try to fight the infection.
So what happens
IF I'M HIV POSITIVE?
You might not know
if you are infected by HIV. Some people
get fever, headache, sore muscles and joints,
stomach ache, swollen lymph glands, or a
skin rash for one or two weeks. Most people
think it's the flu. Some people have no
symptoms.
The virus will multiply
in your body for a few weeks or even months
before your immune system responds. When
your immune system responds, it starts to
make antibodies. When this happens, you
will test positive for HIV.
You would sometimes develop
flu-like symptoms, and people can often
recover from the flu but that does not mean
that the HIV is out of your body. In fact,
during this time, HIV is damaging your immune
system.
So when your immune system
collapses, viruses, parasites, fungi and
bacteria that usually don't cause any problems
can make you very sick. You get to see them
as fevers, night sweats, diarrhea, or swollen
lymph nodes and these problems will last
more than a few days, and probably continue
for several weeks.
Without treatment, the
immune system will most likely go down.
And over time the disease of HIV becomes
AIDS. This happens when the immune system
is seriously damaged and not able to resist
any kind of infection. These are called
OPPORTUNISTIC INFECTIONS and in spite of
treatment for the illnesses you are unable
to restore the system back to function as
before. So the person not just suffers from
infection after infection but is unable
to recover soon from the illnesses.
BEING HIV-POSITIVE, OR HAVING
HIV DISEASE, IS NOT THE SAME AS HAVING AIDS.
Many people are HIV-positive
but don't get sick for many years. As HIV
disease continues, it slowly wears down
the immune system.
In the mid-1990s, AIDS
was a leading cause of death. Largely because
the condition of AIDS was not understood
but also because the person is unable to
recover from the opportunistic infections,
and mind you there could be multiples of
them. So, often doctors would end up treating
the person for the symptoms displayed and
newer and newer illnesses surfaced, making
the person more and more weak until he succumbed
to it. However, newer treatments have cut
the AIDS death rate significantly and also
been able to maintain the person at the
level of being HIV+ and not allowing the
immune system to collapse completely to
get to the condition of full blown HIV infection
or AIDS.
The only possibility is
to continue to maintain this state as there
is no cure for AIDS. There are drugs that
can slow down the HIV virus, and slow down
the damage to your immune system. There
is no way to "clear" the HIV out
of your body.
Other drugs can prevent
or treat opportunistic infections (OIs).
In most cases, these drugs work very well.
The newer, stronger antiretroviral medications
(ARVs) have also helped reduce the rates
of most OIs. A few OIs, however, are still
very difficult to treat.
HOW DO YOU GET AIDS?
You don't actually
"get" AIDS. You could get infected
with HIV, and later you might develop AIDS.
You can get infected with HIV from anyone
who's infected, even if they don't look
sick and even if they haven't tested HIV-positive
yet. The blood, vaginal fluid, semen, and
breast milk of people infected with HIV
has enough of the virus in it to infect
other people.
Most people get the HIV
virus by:
• having sex with an infected person
• sharing a needle (shooting drugs) with
someone who's infected
Getting a transfusion
of infected blood used to be a way people
got AIDS, but now the blood supply is screened
very carefully and the risk is extremely
low.
There are no documented
cases of HIV being transmitted by tears
or saliva, but it is possible to be infected
with HIV through oral sex or in rare cases
through deep kissing, especially if you
have open sores in your mouth or bleeding
gums.
The most common
OPPORTUNISTIC INFECTIONS that people contract
while having AIDS are:
• Pneumocystis pneumonia
(PCP): a lung infection
• Kaposi's sarcoma (KS): a skin cancer
• Cytomegalovirus (CMV): an infection that
usually affects the eyes; and
• Candida: a fungal infection that can cause
thrush (a white film in your mouth) or infections
in your throat or vagina
Watch out
for these, as they could be a way to check
out if you have contracted AIDS.
The other common symptoms
that persons infected with AIDS experience
include serious weight loss, brain tumors,
and other health problems. Without treatment,
these opportunistic infections would end
up being fatal.
Yet it has been found
that AIDS is different in every infected
person. Some people die a few months after
getting infected, while others live fairly
normal lives for many years, even after
they "officially" have AIDS. A
few HIV-positive people stay healthy for
many years even without taking antiretroviral
medications
Coming
up soon……… How do you safe guard yourself
against this disease?
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