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Dr. Abdulkarim Alhethail

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1 Dr. Abdulkarim Alhethail
HIV & AIDS Dr. Abdulkarim Alhethail Assistant Professor

2 Outline Introduction to HIV & AIDS
HIV main structural components & life cycle HIV pathogenesis Stages of HIV infection Persistent generalized lymphadenopathy (PGL) AIDS related complex (ARC) Transmission Diagnosis Serological profile Management & treatment

3 Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
Is a retrovirus that causes human AIDS, and was initially identified in 1983. Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) Is the end stage of the disease that is associated with opportunistic infections and unusual cancer (Kaposi sarcoma).

4 Characteristics of HIV
Family of Retroviridae. Virion consist of: Glycoprotein envelope (gp120, gp41). Matrix layer. Capsid. Two copies of ssRNA. Enzymes (reverse transcriptase, integrase, protease).

5 HIV genome The genome encodes 9 proteins:
3 structural proteins (Core, enzymes, envelope) 6 non-structural proteins (Tat, Nef, Rev, Vif, Vpr, Vpu)

6 HIV life cycle

7 HIV species There are two HIV species known to cause AIDS in human HIV-1 and HIV-2, and the overall sequence homology between HIV-1 & HIV-2 is less than 50%.

8 Continued.. HIV-1: Causes HIV infection worldwide. Highly virulent.
Highly susceptible to mutations. HIV-2: Causes the infection in specific regions e.g. West Africa Relatively less virulent. Relatively less susceptible to mutations.

9 HIV pathogenesis

10 Stages of HIV infection
The course of HIV infection goes through 3 stages: Acute phase, Chronic phase, and AIDS.

11 Acute phase: Lasts for about 12 weeks.
Rapid viral replication (high viral load). Gradual decrease in CD4 cell count. 50-70% of patients develop symptoms resemble infectious mononucleosis or Flu (fever, headache, anorexia, fatigue, lymphadenopathy, & skin rash). 20% of patients may develop aseptic meningitis. In healthy peoples monocytes exert normal phagocytic activity, antigen presentation and cytokine secretion upon stimulation with cytokine or microbial antigens. However, HIV infected patients the monocytes functions are impaired. So, we hypothesized that ………

12 Chronic phase: Lasts for about 10 yrs in adults. Low viral load.
CD4 count > 500/ml Totally asymptomatic but the patients still contagious.

13 AIDS: The end stage of the disease.
Continuous viral replication (high viral load). Marked decrease in CD4 cell count < 200 Persistent or frequent multiple opportunistic infections, and unusual cancers (Kaposi sarcoma).

14 Persistent generalized lymphadenopathy (PGL)
Is defined as enlargement of lymph nodes for at least 1 cm in diameter, and must meet the following conditions: In two or more extra inguinal area. Persists for at least 3 months. In the absence of any illness or medication known to cause PGL.

15 AIDS-related complex (ARC)
Is the clinical symptoms that come before AIDS and may include the following: Fever of unknown origin that persists > 1 month. Chronic diarrhea, persisting > 1 month. Weight loss > 10% of the original weight. Fatigue.

16 Transmission of HIV Sexually (unprotected sex).
Direct exposure to infected blood (receiving blood from infected donor). Using contaminated or not adequately sterilized tools in surgical or cosmetic practice (dental, tattooing, body piercing). Sharing contaminated needles, razors, or tooth brushes. Perinatally (from mother to baby).

17 Diagnosis Patient history with or without clinical symptoms.
Detection of both HIV Ag & Ab in the patient serum. If repeatedly reactive (positive), do confirmatory tests (Western Blot, RIBA, PCR). Blood viral load by PCR is also used to follow up a patient treatment.

18 Serological profile of HIV infection

19 Management No vaccine available to prevent HIV infection, and thus education is the best strategy to use to manage HIV spread as follow: Religious education (by teaching the risk of making prohibited relations). Health education (by teaching the risk of using shared materials). Advise of using condoms when necessary.

20 Treatment Is a combined therapy known as high active antiretroviral therapy (HAART). NOTE: HAART does not clear the virus, and should be taken all life. NOTE: HAART treated patients are still contagious even if their blood viral load below detection (< 50 copies/μL). HAART is usually composed of two reverse transcriptase inhibitors and one protease inhibitor.

21 Continued.. There are two types of reverse transcriptase inhibitors:
Nucleoside analog RT inhibitors for HIV-1 & HIV-2: - Zidovudine (AZT) Zalcitabine (DDC) - Stavudine (D4T) Lamivudine (3TC) Non-nucleoside analog RT inhibitors for HIV-1 only: - Nevirapine - Delavirdine Efavirenz Proteases inhibitors include: - Saquinavir - Indinavir - Nelfinavir Ritonavir

22 Goals of HIV treatment To inhibit viral replication.
To control chronic immune activation and keep the immune system close to the normal state. To prevent the development of opportunistic infection. To minimize the chance of viral transmission especially from mother to neonate.

23 Thank you for your attention !


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