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Aids cure on the Horizon?

Great if true/possible

Aids virus vaccine 'could remove ALL traces of disease from sufferers for the rest of their lives'


* Vaccine enables immune system to be constantly 'on the alert' for HIV

* More than half of infected monkeys given vaccine showed 'no signs' of virus in tests

* Human trials is next step for vaccine development


An experimental drug helped monkeys with a form of the Aids virus control the infection for more than a year, suggesting it may lead to a vaccine for people, or even a cure.

Researchers said Cytomegalovirus (CMV) works by priming the immune system to quickly attack the HIV virus when it first enters the body, a point at which the virus is most vulnerable.

Dr Louis Picker of the Oregon National Primate Research Centre, whose study appears in the journal Nature, said he thinks it will be possible to have a vaccine ready to test in people within three years.

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HIV Aids virus as seen through a microscope: The next step in the vaccine's development will be to test it in clinical trials in humans


CMV enables the immune system to be constantly on the alert for HIV.

Researchers used different versions of the vaccine against a monkey form of the Aids virus, SIV (Simian Immunodeficiency Virus) with outstanding results.

More than half the rhesus macaques treated responded to the point where even the most sensitive tests detected no signs of SIV.

To date, most of the animals have maintained control over the virus for more than a year, gradually showing no indication that they had ever been infected.

Unvaccinated monkeys infected with SIV went on to develop the monkey equivalent of Aids, caused by the collapse of their immune systems.

The findings suggest the vaccine could be effective enough to rid the body of immunodeficiency virus completely, according to the scientists writing in the journal Nature.

Conventional antiretroviral therapies are able to control HIV infection, but cannot clear the virus from its hiding places within the immune system's white blood cells.

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Pioneering: Conventional antiretroviral therapies are able to control HIV infection, but cannot clear the virus from its hiding places within the immune system's white blood cells


Dr Picker said: 'The next step in vaccine development is to test the vaccine candidate in clinical trials in humans.

'For a human vaccine, the CMV vector would be weakened sufficiently so that it does not cause illness, but will still protect against HIV.'

CMV belongs to the herpes family of viruses, and like other members of the group never leaves the body once an infection has occurred.

An estimated half of all adults in the UK carry CMV but suffer no or few symptoms. The virus is spread through bodily fluids such as saliva and urine.

When symptoms do occur, they are similar to those of flu including a high temperature and swollen glands and tiredness. People with weakened immune systems can have a more severe response.


Eliminating the Aids virus

‘What’s exciting about these findings is that for the first time a vaccine candidate has been able to fully control the virus in some animals,’ said Dr Wayne Koff, chief scientific officer at the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative (IAVI), which helped fund the research.

Koff said the findings also suggested the possibility that the immune system may eventually eliminate the virus altogether.

‘This research gives us potential clues as to how we might design an HIV vaccine for humans that would provide the same type of control,’ he said.

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Fresh hope: The findings suggest the vaccine could be effective enough to rid the body of immunodeficiency virus completely


There is no cure for Aids, but cocktails of drugs can keep the disease at bay for many years.

The human immunodeficiency virus that causes Aids infects 33.3million people globally, according to the United Nations agency UNAIDS. It has killed more than 25million people.

Because it is spread in so many ways - during sex, on needles shared by drug users, in breast milk and in blood - there is no single easy way to prevent infection.

A vaccine is the best hope, and many drug companies and scientific research groups are working on various ways to try to develop one.

‘The breakthrough here is in using a viral-delivered vaccine that persists - essentially using an engineered virus to thwart a pathogenic virus,’ said Robin Shattock, a professor of mucosal infection and immunity at Britain’s Imperial College, who was not involved in the research.

‘Before this, scientists had pretty much given up on the idea of a vaccine that could control HIV replication. This puts it firmly back on the agenda.’

Efforts so far to make an Aids vaccine have not been successful, but a 2009 study in Thailand involving 16,000 people showed for the first time that a vaccine could safely prevent HIV infection in a small number of volunteers.

Dr Picker said the next step is to make a weaker version of the CMV virus to make sure it does not cause any problems in people.

‘The concern would be if we move a virus that is not modified that in some small number it might cause disease,’ he said.



Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/a...e-traces-disease-sufferers.html#ixzz1M7XyW7C8
 

Will E Worm

Conspiracy...
Would you want to sleep with someone even though they were supposedly cured?


There are many more older disease that should have been cured by now.
 
Vaccins for everything now, Aids, Alzheimers, Cocaine addiction ...


Buying:computer: Drug company stock as we speak!
 
isn't it just tons of money injected directly into the blood stream? :tongue:

but seriously awesome. can i get it in pill form?
 
Rapid overpopulation is imminent...

It's good news for people that have it, not so much for the planet. :cool:
 

L3ggy

Special Operations FOX-HOUND
Poor monkeys.
 

RealMenSwallow

Closed Account
Wouldn't the world go absolutely insane if there was a cure? Everyone with AIDS would want it but the government would sanction it so severely that people would still die because of AIDS. So how good is this really? Who is it really going to help? Let's be real here. :2 cents:
 
Why? They helped half of them get rid of their AIDS :dunno:


Haha! Poor monkeys because the researchers gave them AIDS before they could cure it. (And they were probably kept in small cages without enough space to chill out and eat a banana.)

But it would be great for people to find a cure for AIDS. (Altough I do think proper education goes a long way with a disease like this...)
 

Legzman

what the fuck you lookin at?
great just what we need. Yet another way for people to live even longer and continue to overpopulate the planet.
 
Haha! Poor monkeys because the researchers gave them AIDS before they could cure it. (And they were probably kept in small cages without enough space to chill out and eat a banana.)

But it would be great for people to find a cure for AIDS. (Altough I do think proper education goes a long way with a disease like this...)

Damn I thought they found monkeys that had already given each other AIDS, I always thought AIDS started with monkeys defending themselves against humans or is that horribly innacurate?
 
60s take 2.

Blue ointment & penicillin.
Life was good.
Great evun.
I lived in the Haight from late '67 to 69.
Lots of 69.:drool1:
Summer of love, I had $$, a Riviera, a couple of good connections, a neat pad and always a nice young hippie chick who needed a place to crash.
Was one of the most fun times of my life.
I don't remember the others.:D
 
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