Four years ago, a team of research physicians at Weill Cornell Medicine began treatment for an HIV patient, in the hopes of finding a cure. This February marked 14 months since the patient was free of ...
A major hurdle to curing people of HIV infection is the way the virus hides in a reservoir composed primarily of dormant immune cells. It is generally believed that HIV does not replicate in these ...
Virologists at Emory University School of Medicine, Yerkes National Primate Research Center, and Children's Healthcare of Atlanta have uncovered a critical detail explaining how HIV assembles its ...
Grinspoon noted that even incremental reductions in blood pressure incidence can translate into meaningful declines in cardiovascular events at the population level. In people living with HIV, who ...
A supercharged HIV vaccine could offer strong protection with just one injection, a study in mice has indicated. Developed by researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and the ...
The Philadelphia HIV Resource Finder allows Philadelphians to search for treatment and prevention resources throughout the city.
LGBTQ Nation on MSN
Funding cuts are devastating Black HIV prevention work. But activists say pressure is working.
For decades, Black HIV activists have filled the gaps left by public systems. Today, that carefully built infrastructure hangs in the balance.
A new UCLA study reveals that breast milk from women living with HIV contains significantly lower levels of tryptophan, an essential amino acid likely important for infant immune function, growth, and ...
A missing nutrient in breast milk might explain health problems among children of moms with HIV Their breast milk has significantly lower levels of tryptophan, an essential amino acid Tryptophan is ...
Hosted on MSN
Self-reactive T cells may explain why some patients can't reach undetectable HIV levels
Despite the capability of antiretroviral drugs to suppress HIV to undetectable levels, some people living with the human immunodeficiency virus can't reach the goal of viral imperceptibility even with ...
WREG-TV Memphis on MSN
HIV rates continue to soar in Shelby Co.
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — The Shelby County Health Department says Memphis and Shelby County continue to have an HIV rate that’s three times higher than the national average. WREG’s Quametra Wilborn explains ...
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