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    HIV hides in gut to escape attack
    فيروس الايدز يختبئ من هجوم العقاقي

    Date :2006-08-02 00:00:00

    HIV is able to survive drug attack by hiding out in the gut lining, US scientists have discovered.

    HIV attacks immune system T-cellsEven when blood tests suggested antiretroviral treatment was working, the virus continued to replicate in the gut, suppressing immune function.

    Writing in the Journal of Virology, the authors recommend earlier, aggressive drug treatment to combat this.

    The University of California team also suggest monitoring patients with gut biopsies as well as blood tests.

    Theirs is the first study to show that, while current HIV therapy is quite successful in reducing viral loads and increasing the number of immune T-cells to fight the infection in peripheral blood, it is not so effective in gut mucosa.

    Dr Satya Dandekar and her team followed 10 patients being treated with highly active antiretroviral therapy, known as HAART.

    They took blood and gut samples from the patients before and after three years of treatment. Three of the patients had been treated very early, within four to six weeks of first being infected with the virus, whereas the others had been infected for at least a year before receiving treatment.

    The patients who had been treated earlier had fewer signs of gut inflammation before treatment and experienced greater recovery of the gut mucosal immune system function after treatment than the other patients.

    Viral reservoir

    Dr Dandekar explained: "We found a substantial delay in the time that it takes to restore the gut mucosal immune system in those with chronic infections.

    "In these patients the gut is acting as a viral reservoir that keeps us from ridding patients of the virus."

    She said the results suggested anti-inflammatory drugs might improve antiretroviral treatment outcomes and that genes involved with the repair and regeneration of the gut mucosal immune system would make excellent drug targets.

    A spokeswoman from the HIV charity AVERT said: "This research offers an enlightening insight into one of the ways that HIV evades drugs in the body, and if further studies show that anti-inflammatory drugs improve the efficacy of antiretrovirals, they could prove a very useful addition to HIV therapy.

    "However, the researchers' suggestion of starting HIV treatment earlier will need to be weighed up against the risk of earlier drug resistance forming, and the difficulties of drug toxicity and side effects before it is considered for adoption as standard medical practice."

    Mary Lima, a treatment specialist at the Terrence Higgins Trust, agreed. She said: "At this stage we have to be cautious as starting treatment earlier, taking anti-inflammatory drugs and having gut biopsies would put an additional burden on people living with HIV.

    "However, it's really important that research into this area continues so we can understand more about HIV and how it could be treated in future."


    اكتشف باحثون أمريكيون من جامعة كاليفورنيا أن فيروس "اتش أي في" المسبب لمرض الايدز ينجو من هجمات العقاقير بالاختباء في الأمعاء.

    وحتى عندما تشير تحاليل الدم إلى أن العقاقير تعمل، فان الفيروس يواصل نسخ نفسه وقمع وظائف جهاز المناعة.

    واقترح الباحثون متابعة المرضى من خلال أخذ عينة مجهرية من الأمعاء وتحليلها، فضلا عن اختبارات الدم.

    ومن جانبها، قالت متحدثة باسم هيئة خيرية معنية بالاهتمام بمرضى الايدز "إن هذا البحث يلقي الضوء على سبل قيام فيروس (اتش أي في) بتجنب العقاقير في الجسم".

    وأضافت قائلة "إذا أثبتت مزيد من الدراسات أن العقاقير المضادة للالتهاب تحسن فعالية عقاقير الايدز، فقد يكون ذلك مزيجا ناجحا في علاج الايدز".

    ومضت تقول "ومع ذلك يقترح الباحثون أن يأخذ البدء المبكر في علاج الفيروس في الاعتبار خطر إمكانية تحور الفيروس ومقاومته للمرض، والصعوبات الناجمة عن سمية العقار، والآثار الجانبية قبل تبني علاج معين".

    وتتفق ماري ليما وهي أخصائية علاجية في تيرنس هيجنس تراست مع هذا الرأي قائلة "في هذه المرحلة لابد وأن نكون حذرين لدى بدء العلاج المبكر، وأخذ عقاقير مضادة للالتهابات كما أن أخذ عينة مجهرية من الأمعاء سيزيد الأعباء على مرضى الايدز".

    وأضافت "ومع ذلك لابد من استمرار الأبحاث في هذا الجانب حتى يزداد فهمنا لفيروس الاتش أي في وكيفية علاجه في المستقبل".



    Source :http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/5221744.stm
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