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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: patients + aids + infant  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

 News results: Standard Version | Text Version | Image Version Results 1 - 10 of about 139 for patients aids infant. (0.35 seconds) 
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South African Clinic Helps AIDS Patients Have Healthy Babies
MyFox Chattanooga, TN -
In a sign of hope on a continent ravaged by AIDS, a South African fertility clinic has started a service allowing couples infected with the virus to have a ...
Scrutiny Grows of Drug Trials Abroad
Wall Street Journal -
The Drugs Controller General of India is now investigating whether the infant was screened properly and whether the rules were bent to get babies into the ...
Fight Continues Against AIDS in Africa
Christian Broadcasting Network, VA -
AIDS patients must take the ARVs regularly for the rest of their lives. Tree of Lives makes sure patients and their families know how and when to take the ...

BainbridgeGa.com
World AIDS Day Dec 1st
BainbridgeGa.com, GA - Nov 30, 2008
New therapies are helping patients with HIV/AIDS live longer, healthier lives." The disease is primarily spread through having unprotected sex with an ...
Health calendar
Monroe News Star, LA -
Bring an infant-sized doll for practice sessions. Free. 329-3776 or 329-8590. Patient's Choice Hospice Volunteer Training ? By appointment, Monday through ...
HIV+ and looking to conceive
Globe and Mail, Canada -
"The clinic has made an investment to provide this service to patients [year-round]." As World AIDS Day is marked today, the move is being applauded by ...
20 years fighting pediatric AIDS
Daily Camera, CO - Nov 28, 2008
Around the world, only one in three HIV-positive, pregnant women is receiving medications to protect her infant from the virus. And children living with HIV ...
FDA sets melamine standard for baby formula
White Rock Reviewer, SD - Nov 29, 2008
Video: Teenage Cancer Patient Gets To Be 'NASCAR Driver' Video: Couple Invites Strangers For Thanksgiving Dinner Video: Ft. Bragg Baby Boom Most Viewed ...YHOO
Local folk artist donates painting to Iredell Memorial
Statesville Record & Landmark,  USA -
James moved to Statesville as an infant and remembers creating her first work of art at the age of five. Painting is not only a form of expression for James ...
Gala evening at the movies
Mirror, MI -
St. John's Support Group for the Caregiver's of Alzheimer's patients or patients with other forms of dementia meet the first and third Friday of each month ...
Source: Google News


 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: patients + aids + infant  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/7/2008)


BBC News
HIV Drug Might Spur Resistant Strains of Virus
U.S. News & World Report, DC - Aug 5, 2008
"[The study] reinforces the need to treat these women with combination therapy, thereby providing better prevention for the infant, while providing better ...
Nevirapine Can Backfire- HIV Drug Might Spur Resistant Strains Of ... TheMedGuru
all 96 news articles »
Haiti's Compounding Food and Health Crises
IRC's Americas Program, NM -
Haiti's main health problems relate to high maternal and infant mortality, TB, HIV-AIDS, malaria, infectious diseases, high blood pressure, ...

Washington Post
Fact Sheet: A Historic and Lifesaving Commitment to Fight HIV/AIDS
MarketWatch - Jul 30, 2008
They had the opportunity to meet with patients and see the hope this program has given them, in addition to visiting with doctors, nurses, and caregivers of ...
Congress Sends Global HIV/AIDS Legislation to the President MarketWatch
google news commentComment by Dr. Paul Zeitz Executive Director, Global AIDS Alliance
all 1,194 news articles »

eFluxMedia
US? Fight against HIV ? Successful Overseas, But Not within Its ...
eFluxMedia - Aug 3, 2008
It is ironic considering the fact that the Bush administration has spent about $19 billion overseas in the past five year to combat AIDS. ...
AIDS workers aim to lift black community's shroud of silence
Fort Worth Star Telegram, TX - Aug 3, 2008
... versus non-African-American patients in terms of the types of treatments that are provided," said Laurencin, who recently co-authored HIV/AIDS and the ...
"Access to Maternal-Infant Prevention and to Preventative ...
Doctors Without Borders, NY - Aug 1, 2008
If there are still huge deficiencies in the fight against pediatric HIV/AIDS, is the same true for the opportunistic diseases that affect the smallest ...
University of California Press, 2007
Metapsychology, NY - Aug 5, 2008
The essays are largely ethnographic analyses of disorders associated with marginal spaces, such as HIV/Aids, trafficking, and prostitution. ...
Doctors' goal: End disparities
Atlanta Journal Constitution,  USA - Jul 28, 2008
These include hypertension, stroke, cancer deaths, diabetes, obesity, infant mortality, HIV/AIDS and more. Concurrently, many of those in greatest need of ...
Drugs add 13 years to average life of HIV patient
Tehran Times, Iran - Jul 25, 2008
Robert Hogg of the British Columbia Center for Excellence in HIV/AIDS in Vancouver, Canada and colleagues looked at 43000 patients in 14 different studies. ...
HIV/AIDS spreading to Papua's remote regions
Jakarta Post, Indonesia - Jul 13, 2008
"The women with HIV/AIDS were infected by their husbands who frequently made trips to the coastal regencies, while the infant victim was infected by his ...
Source: Google News

Reduction of Maternal-Infant Transmission of Human Immunodeficiency Virus 1 with Zidovudine … -
EM Connor, RS Sperling, R Gelber, P Kiselev, G … - Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey, 1995 - obgynsurvey.com
... for the prevention of mother-infant HIV transmission, the Pediatric AIDS Clinical
Trial ... that the enrollment of additional patients be discontinued ...

Safety of the maternal-infant zidovudine regimen utilized in the Pediatric AIDS Clinical Trial Group … -
RS Sperling, DE Shapiro, GD McSherry, P Britto, BE … - AIDS, 1998 - aidsonline.com
... performed, and if abnormal, patients were evaluated ... were classified as AIDS-defining
(class ... All obstetrical complications, infant structural abnormalities, and ...

HIV-specific cytotoxic T-cells in HIV-exposed but uninfected Gambian women -
S Rowland-Jones, J Sutton, K Ariyoshi, T Dong, F … - Nature Medicine, 1995 - nature.com
... activity in an HIV-exposed but uninfected infant. ... viral recombinant proteins in
HIV-2-infected patients. AIDS 7, 1389-1391 (1993) | PubMed | ISI | ChemPort ...

… Treatment, and the Risk of Transmission of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 from Mother to Infant -
RS Sperling, DE Shapiro, RW Coombs, JA Todd, SA … - Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey, 1997 - obgynsurvey.com
... reduced the circulating viral load and diminished the exposure of the infant to
the ... The total US federal funding on AIDS research and patient care has ...

Incubation periods for paediatric AIDS patients. -
I Auger, P Thomas, V De Gruttola, D Morse, D Moore … - Nature, 1988 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
... We use parametric and non-parametric methods to analyse incubation periods for 215
paediatric patients with AIDS whose only known route of infection is maternal ...

Identification of the K103N resistance mutation in Ugandan women receiving nevirapine to prevent HIV … -
JB Jackson, G Becker-Pergola, LA Guay, P Musoke, M … - AIDS, 2000 - aidsonline.com
... of replication and estimated prevalence in untreated patients. ... AIDS Res Human
Retroviruses 2000, 16: 807 -813 ... HIV-1 viruses from a Ugandan woman to her infant. ...

… Microsporidan: Enterocytozoon bieneusi ng, n. sp., in the Enterocytes of a Human Patient with AIDS -
I Desportes, YL Charpentier, A Galian, F Bernard, … - Journal of Eurkaryotic Microbiology, 1985 - Blackwell Synergy
... infestation of our immuno-deficient patient was of ... In enterocytes of a man with AIDS. ...
Disseminated nosematosis in an im- munologically compromised infant. ...

Genetic Evidence for Mother-to-Infant Transmission of Hepatitis G Virus. -
B Fischler, C Lara, M Chen, A Sonnerborg, A Nemeth … - Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey, 1998 - obgynsurvey.com
... were HGV-positive, suggesting transmission of HGV from mother to baby either during ...
replication on the prognosis in a cohort of HIV-1-infected patients. AIDS. ...

Cerebrovascular disease in AIDS: a case-control study.
JR Berger, JO Harris, J Gregorios, M Norenberg - AIDS, 1990 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
... disease. The clinical records of those patients with AIDS with cerebrovascular
disease were retrospectively examined in detail. All ...

AIDS in rural eastern North Carolina--patient migration: a rural AIDS burden. -
RL Rumley, NC Shappley, LE Waivers, JD Esinhart - AIDS, 1991 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
... 27858-4354. A descriptive retrospective study on the AIDS and HIV patients
of rural eastern North Carolina was performed. Our data ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Infant transplant patients resist infections that kill adult AIDS patients

Researchers have discovered that some type of protective system goes into action in some cases when a baby's immune system is deficient.
This discovery indicates a hidden safety net that might have far-reaching consequences for treating diseases of the immune system such as AIDS.

The Mayo Clinic-led study was conducted with colleagues in Toronto and Baltimore, and is published in the Journal of Immunology.

The researchers studied 20 patients who as infants underwent heart transplantation and had their thymus removed.
As a result the infants were deficient in T cells, the cells depleted in AIDS patients that are crucial to fighting viruses and cancer tumors.

The researchers found that over a 10-year-period the infant transplant patients resisted the same infections that often kill adult AIDS patients.
The transplant patients maintained their health even with low T cell counts.

" We are very excited by this result," says Jeffrey Platt, the Mayo transplant researcher who led the team. " This will be the first step to discovering how to make the immune system work in patients who have severe defects in their immune systems or who have cancer."

The Mayo Clinic researchers report results comparing T cell function between transplant patients 1-10 years post transplant and healthy people matched to the transplant patients by age and gender.
To compare T cell function, they measured the T cell response to select viral immunization.
This comparison enabled them to see that infant heart transplant patients had more help from the immune system post transplant, even though some had a 10,000-fold reduction in T cells, compared to the healthy control group.
The nature of the compensating system is not yet known and is under study.

The findings are important because they show the immune system is more adaptable and resourceful than once thought. Something other than T cells is working to resist viruses in the post-transplant patients.

The findings also suggest an intriguing strategy for developing new treatments for AIDS, cancers and diseases of impaired immune function related to aging. If this ability of infant-transplant patients' immune systems can be identified and enlisted to fight viruses without T cells, it perhaps could be therapeutically manipulated in adult patients to arrive at new and better treatments for various diseases involving immune system deficiencies.

" We were struck by the fact that when a heart transplant is carried out in very young infants, the thymus that produces T cells is removed and a drug is given that depletes T cells," said Platt. " Yet the infants don't get the same diseases that adult AIDS patients do, even though the transplanted infants are basically a model of AIDS. In fact, the post-transplant patients do very well resisting infections. It seemed to us very important to understand why this is so, because maybe that would help us help people with age-related diseases caused by declining immunity, or AIDS, or cancers, and understand why certain people tend to be more susceptible to infections."

Source: Mayo Clinic, 2006

 
 
 
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