Aquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome Flashcards

1
Q

What fluids are associated with HIV transmission?

A

Blood
Semen
Vaginal secretions
Breast milk

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2
Q

Why is IV exposure much more transmissible than genital exposure?

A

Genital has mucosal barriers of intact epithelium, pH, adaptive mucosal immunity

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3
Q

Are uncircumcised or circumcised men at a higher risk for HIV?

A

Uncircumcised - inner mucosa of the foreskin has less keratinization (deposition of fibrous protein) and a higher density of target cells for HIV infectio

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4
Q

Why are individuals with HSV infections more like to become infected even if there are no actual ulcers at the time of exposure?

A

HSV creates a better target environment for HIV, submucosal T cells are activated and much more likely to take up HIV and become infected.

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5
Q

Describe an acute HIV infection.

A

The time period following infection during which HIV virus can be detected in blood but antibodies to HIV are not present. Appears 1-4 weeks after exposure, 40-90% are asymptomatic, usually lasts about 14 days. Have a high risk of transmission during this time.

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6
Q

What will HIV tests look like with an acute HIV infection?

A

Positive HIV-1 RNA test

Negative HIV antibody test

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7
Q

Explain why HIV is considered a “slippery” virus.

A

People make neutralizing antibodies against their own HIV virus but they only work against the virus that was there a few months ago because HIV is always changing.

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8
Q

How does HIV blunt the humoral response?

A

Uses conformational masking:
Lack of broad neutralization
Shielding of highly-conserved co-receptor binding regions by hyper variable loops
Surface glycosylation – focused changes in glycan packing prevents neutralizing antibody binding but not receptor binding

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9
Q

What is the main reason that HIV cannot be cured?

A

It integrates into the host genome and establishes a latent reservoir in resting CD4+ cells.

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10
Q

How many visions are produced a day?

A

10^9 - 10^10

with one error each time the genome is replicated – lots of mutations

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11
Q

Explain Immune Reconstitution Inflammatory Syndrome (IRIS).

A

Paradoxical deterioration in clinical status after initiating antiretroviral therapy. Due to the recovery of the immune system to latent or subclinical infections or non-infectious processes. Takes about 8 wks to develop.

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12
Q

What is a major target of primary HIV infection in our bodies?

A

GALT (gut-associated lymphoid tissue)

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