Habari News Tanzania
What is the history of HIV, and when was HIV discovered?
The history of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and
acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) dates back to 1981, when
homosexual
men with symptoms of a disease that now are considered typical of AIDS
were first described in Los Angeles and New York. The men had an unusual
type of lung infection (
pneumonia) called
Pneumocystis carinii (now known as
Pneumocystis jiroveci)
pneumonia (PCP) and rare skin tumors called Kaposi's sarcomas. The patients were
noted to have a severe reduction in a type of cell in the blood (CD4 cells) that is an
important part of the
immune system.
These cells, often referred to as
T cells, help
the body fight infections. Shortly thereafter, this disease was
recognized
throughout the United States, Western Europe, and Africa. In 1983,
researchers
in the United States and France described the virus that causes AIDS,
now known
as HIV, belonging to the group of viruses
called retroviruses. While HIV infection is required to develop AIDS,
the actual definition of AIDS is the development of a low CD4 cell count
(<200 cells/mm
3) or any one of a long list of
complications of HIV infection ranging from a variety of so-called
"opportunistic infections," cancers, neurologic symptoms, and wasting
syndromes.
No comments:
Post a Comment