ncsuallday Sink the Flagship 9818 Posts user info edit post |
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2011/06/05/eveningnews/main20069146.shtml
this is not backed up by time series case studies or the like, but apparently doctors have found a cure that has worked for at least one person (theoretically).
Quote : | "(CBS News) Thirty years ago from Sunday, the Centers for Disease Control issued the first report on the emerging AIDS epidemic. Now, after years of progress in holding back the disease, there is finally an apparent case of one successful cure.
CBS News correspondent Hank Plante reports that 45-year-old Timothy Ray Brown, now living in the Bay Area, tested positive for HIV back in 1995, but now has entered the scientific journals as the first man in world history to have his HIV completely eliminated from his body. It's what doctors call a "functional cure."
He was living in Berlin, Germany, in 2007, dealing with HIV and leukemia, when scientists there gave him a bone marrow, stem cell transplant that had astounding results.
"I quit taking my HIV medication on the day that I got the transplant and haven't had to take any since," Brown says, adding that his diseases are effectively gone.
In fact, his only medical problem these days is one involving his speech and motor skills because of neurological damage after the treatment, but that's getting better.
"The Berlin Patient," as Brown is known, received stem cells from a donor who was immune to HIV. In fact, about one percent of Caucasians are immune to HIV. Some say it goes back to the Great Plague; People who survived the plague developed an immunity, and that immunity was passed down to their heirs today.
Brown says being the first man to be cured of HIV makes him very, very happy.
Needless to say, Brown is now being monitored by doctors at San Francisco General Hospital and here at UCSF, where we sought out a medical opinion from one of the most respected AIDS researchers in the world, Dr. Jay Levy, who was one of the co-discoverers of the HIV virus.
"If you're able to take the white cells from someone and manipulate them so they're no longer infectable by HIV, and those white cells become the whole immune system of that individual, you've got essentially what we call a functional cure," Dr. Levy says.
We also sought out a medical opinion from Dr. Paul Volberding, another pioneering AIDS expert, who has studied the disease for all of its 30 years.
"One element of his treatment, and we don't know which, allowed apparently the virus to be purged from his body. So its going to be an interesting, I think, productive area to study," Dr. Volderding says. "He hasn't had any recurrence now for several years I think of the virus, and that hasn't happened before in our experience."
Timothy Brown's radical procedure may not be applicable to many other people with HIV, because of the difficulty in doing stem cell transplants, and finding the right donor. But this one case does open the door to the field of "cure research," which is now gaining more attention.
"I'm cured of HIV," Brown says. "I had HIV, but I don't anymore."
Those are words that so many in the scientific community are now cautiously clinging to.
Read more: http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2011/06/05/eveningnews/main20069146.shtml#ixzz1ORy0XBhZ" |
6/5/2011 8:12:07 PM |
Samwise16 All American 12710 Posts user info edit post |
Pretty sure this is [old] news
[Edited on June 5, 2011 at 8:13 PM. Reason : but still cool] 6/5/2011 8:12:47 PM |
ncsuallday Sink the Flagship 9818 Posts user info edit post |
story just broke 26 minutes ago 6/5/2011 8:13:13 PM |
Samwise16 All American 12710 Posts user info edit post |
The Berlin patient has been known for a while iirc
is it breaking now because they're officially saying yes, he's absolutely cured? I thought they announced him basically cured a while ago 6/5/2011 8:14:00 PM |
Ernie All American 45943 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "Pretty sure this is [old] news" |
-- Magic Johnson6/5/2011 8:14:14 PM |
ncsuallday Sink the Flagship 9818 Posts user info edit post |
Magic takes a shit ton of pills daily, this involves altering the immune system so the body can defend it on its own 6/5/2011 8:15:34 PM |
Ernie All American 45943 Posts user info edit post |
OH REALLY CAUSE I WAS TOTALLY SERIOUS 6/5/2011 8:16:01 PM |
Samwise16 All American 12710 Posts user info edit post |
lawl @ Magic Johnson
but seriously
May 17, 2011 http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/146949/20110517/timothy-ray-brown-berlin-patient-hiv-cure-video.htm
December 14, 2010 http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/12/14/hiv-cure-berlin-patient_n_796521.html
June 21, 1998 http://www.nytimes.com/1998/06/21/magazine/the-berlin-patient.html
(Obviously wasn't "cured" in 1998, but you get the point) 6/5/2011 8:16:58 PM |
Joie begonias is my boo 22491 Posts user info edit post |
samwise is right
i remember learning about this last year in immunology. badass stuff though. 6/5/2011 8:19:45 PM |
Ragged All American 23473 Posts user info edit post |
Yeah its called stop being gay 6/5/2011 8:20:57 PM |
merbig Suspended 13178 Posts user info edit post |
This is Chit Chat. We don't care about people being cured of AIDS/HIV. We care about people GETTING AIDS/HIV so that we can laugh at them.
LULZ 6/5/2011 8:25:37 PM |
adultswim Suspended 8379 Posts user info edit post |
^^ god damn you're stupid 6/5/2011 8:33:54 PM |
Ragged All American 23473 Posts user info edit post |
^ no I'm just to ignorant to read the story 6/5/2011 8:36:20 PM |
dweedle All American 77386 Posts user info edit post |
my old RA from Carroll Hall found something with gold atoms that helped w/ HIV during his PhD/post doc, etc
he posted on here some a long time ago: buzzday 6/5/2011 8:36:33 PM |
puck_it All American 15446 Posts user info edit post |
6/5/2011 8:36:58 PM |
ThePeter TWW CHAMPION 37709 Posts user info edit post |
^^nanotech I assume? 6/5/2011 8:40:15 PM |
Supplanter supple anteater 21831 Posts user info edit post |
Is that related to this? message_topic.aspx?topic=606396 or message_topic.aspx?topic=610009&page=1#14630217 6/5/2011 8:40:49 PM |
BigMan157 no u 103354 Posts user info edit post |
man, I bet most college-aged people don't even realize magic has HIV
or that he had a turrible talk show 6/5/2011 8:41:39 PM |
Arab13 Art Vandelay 45180 Posts user info edit post |
hiv virus can hide in many many different tissues and sometimes never manifest a full blown infection, takes a lot of testing to make sure the body is actually clear. 6/5/2011 8:45:45 PM |
dweedle All American 77386 Posts user info edit post |
he had an article in some well-known magazine ... there was a thread in the Lounge about it many yrs ago
here's the article: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/05/080523162920.htm] 6/5/2011 8:46:11 PM |
ncstatetke All American 41128 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "one percent of Caucasians are immune to HIV" |
fingers crossed!6/5/2011 8:58:40 PM |
Samwise16 All American 12710 Posts user info edit post |
^ that stuff fascinates me
like how Caucasians have a higher carrier rate of cystic fibrosis... theories say the frequency increased centuries ago to protect against cholera I believe
or with sickle cell in Africans - it protects them against malaria 6/5/2011 9:04:54 PM |
dmspack oh we back 25500 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "about one percent of Caucasians are immune to HIV" |
Maybe I'm in the minority, but I was not aware of this. As said ^^, fingers crossed.6/5/2011 9:08:47 PM |
dweedle All American 77386 Posts user info edit post |
is there a way to be tested to see if you are immune?
other than inject you with the virus and see if you get it? 6/5/2011 9:09:58 PM |
Samwise16 All American 12710 Posts user info edit post |
Maybe there's a genetic test? There might be a protective portion of the MHC in the genome 6/5/2011 9:10:51 PM |
Joie begonias is my boo 22491 Posts user info edit post |
iirc there is a genetic test you can have
its a mutation of the CCR5 receptor of the t cell.
i know that you can have the test done if you are infected to be prescribed a very specific HIV med (called maraviroc), so i imagine that you can get one if you do not have HIV.
[Edited on June 5, 2011 at 9:13 PM. Reason : i could be wrong here but im pretty sure im right ] 6/5/2011 9:13:11 PM |
Samwise16 All American 12710 Posts user info edit post |
damn girl you good
CCR5-delta32 allele 6/5/2011 9:15:33 PM |
Tarpon All American 1380 Posts user info edit post |
I too read Yahoo News 6/5/2011 9:15:43 PM |
Joie begonias is my boo 22491 Posts user info edit post |
we spend quite a long time on this.
and cancer. 6/5/2011 9:16:45 PM |
bottombaby IRL 21954 Posts user info edit post |
More likely than not, it's expensive (1-2,000 bucks) and not covered by insurance. 6/5/2011 9:17:44 PM |
Samwise16 All American 12710 Posts user info edit post |
^ lawl... truth
dude Joie... we spend a lot on cancer tooooo
but not really immunology (though we should)... the main problem with us + immunity is that for a lot of disorders they have no idea what the F causes it. most things they can just say "oh... higher susceptibility with this allele" 6/5/2011 9:19:53 PM |
bottombaby IRL 21954 Posts user info edit post |
I'm surprised that you don't spend more time on primary immune diseases because a lot of them are heritable. 6/5/2011 9:28:20 PM |
Samwise16 All American 12710 Posts user info edit post |
Oh we definitely talk about the HLA susceptibility alleles and how haplotypes are inherited, etc
We just don't spend a lot of time on how to counsel people about them because even though they are inherited, there are very few of them where we can say with certainty someone will develop it... it's multifactorial inheritance, and hardly any of the diseases you can actually test for, so we can't help people out with it a whole lot until there's more knowledge in the area :\ 6/5/2011 9:32:49 PM |
bottombaby IRL 21954 Posts user info edit post |
Well, I know that immune deficiencies are at least pretty rare and I don't believe many of them survive to reproductive ages. So it may just be a moot point.
[Edited on June 5, 2011 at 9:37 PM. Reason : .] 6/5/2011 9:37:07 PM |
BigMan157 no u 103354 Posts user info edit post |
those stem cells are marvelous things 6/5/2011 9:38:32 PM |
Samwise16 All American 12710 Posts user info edit post |
There are a lot of immune disorders where you can survive to a reproductive age... Narcolepsy, Hashimoto, Celiac, MS, rheumatoid arthritis, etc
[Edited on June 5, 2011 at 9:48 PM. Reason : .] 6/5/2011 9:48:27 PM |
bottombaby IRL 21954 Posts user info edit post |
hence "deficiencies"
6/5/2011 9:50:14 PM |
Samwise16 All American 12710 Posts user info edit post |
whoops, my b
but going off that, the types of disorders you're referring to we would be counseling for other reasons and not solely immunity... like Hypohidrotic Ectodermal Dysplasia
[Edited on June 5, 2011 at 9:55 PM. Reason : I need to stop trying to do too many things and read the whole post] 6/5/2011 9:54:12 PM |
se7entythree YOSHIYOSHI 17377 Posts user info edit post |
23andme does some sort of test for it. here's the description of the results.
Quote : | "The Delta32 version of CCR5 is inherited in a simple recessive manner. This means that someone must have two copies of Delta32 in order to have no CCR5 protein on their immune cells. Although people with two copies of Delta32 are highly resistant to the most common type of HIV, they can be vulnerable to strains of the virus that do not use CCR5 to enter immune cells. Time of progression to AIDS after infection with HIV is variable and depends on a number of factors. These factors include general immune system function, age, and exposure to other infectious diseases. " |
here's my result
Quote : | "Genotype: DI ----- Not resistant to HIV infection but may have slower progression to AIDS after infection." |
other results
Quote : | "DD ----- Resistant to infection by the most common strain of HIV people usually encounter, though protection is not complete.
II ----- Not resistant to HIV infection; shows average time of progression to AIDS after infection." |
i paid $99 for the full health & ancestry testing thing.
[Edited on June 5, 2011 at 9:59 PM. Reason : ]6/5/2011 9:55:39 PM |
Mr. Joshua Swimfanfan 43948 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "Now 45, Brown needs no medicines, and his only health problems are from the mugging he suffered two years ago as he returned home one night in Berlin. Brown was knocked unconscious, required brain surgery and therapy to walk and talk again, and doesn't have full use of one arm. He moved back to the United States in December." |
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110603/ap_on_he_me/us_med_aids_anniversary
dude has had a rough life6/5/2011 9:57:57 PM |
Joie begonias is my boo 22491 Posts user info edit post |
^^nice
im curious of mine.
where did you get it done? i totally want one just because 6/5/2011 10:08:24 PM |
Samwise16 All American 12710 Posts user info edit post |
Isn't it normally like $400? I think there was a sale of $99 a while ago.
^ 23andMe, Navigenics 6/5/2011 10:10:15 PM |
evan All American 27701 Posts user info edit post |
if you get the 23andme kit, it includes the CCR5-delta32 SNP check as well.
i don't have the mutation
i signed up for it on the national genetic testing day or whatever it was where they were offering the kit for free + $5/month for a year. pretty fascinating.] 6/5/2011 10:13:58 PM |
DoubleDown All American 9382 Posts user info edit post |
Right now it is $99 + $9/mo for their updates. Follow them on Twitter, they often give coupon codes that reduces it by $99 6/5/2011 10:14:17 PM |
Joie begonias is my boo 22491 Posts user info edit post |
dude dude
duuuuuuuuuuuuuuude. i am ALL over this post wedding. cody too. 6/5/2011 10:17:25 PM |
Samwise16 All American 12710 Posts user info edit post |
I'm kinda meh with the whole DTC testing thing. But then again, I'm on the side of the fence having to deal with people who greatly misunderstand what the thing does or is telling them
[Edited on June 5, 2011 at 10:26 PM. Reason : and quite a bit of doctors won't know how to interpret the results for people]
[Edited on June 5, 2011 at 10:26 PM. Reason : andddd there's not a lot of regulation atm] 6/5/2011 10:26:18 PM |
evan All American 27701 Posts user info edit post |
^this. 6/5/2011 10:30:07 PM |
se7entythree YOSHIYOSHI 17377 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "where did you get it done? i totally want one just because" |
like i said in my post, the testing was done by 23andme. http://www.23andme.com
Quote : | "23andMe, Navigenics" |
familytreedna is the other BIG one
Quote : | "Isn't it normally like $400? I think there was a sale of $99 a while ago." |
it used to be $499 several years ago, and you'd only get half (either health info or ancestry). my dad bought the test then, for the ancestry part, & a couple of years later they gave him his health info for free once they switched the pricing. my uncle, who is extremely racist, was obsessed over the possibly of having a slave in our family tree. all of our genealogy research pointed to yes. 23andme says my dad is 2% african; i'm 1%. lol
i paid $99 last xmas. i snatched up the free + 1 year monthly subscription thing for my husband a few months ago.
i don't view the tests as any sort of medical diagnosis or advice. it's entertainment with scientific backing to me. one of big reasons i got my husband a kit was bc i wanted to see the odds of us having a kid without brown eyes. he is chinese/cambodian with brown eyes obviously. i'm white with hazel eyes, but my dad has blue eyes.
for anyone curious, the odds for eye color are 71% brown/black 26% green/hazel 4% blue/gray
it also says 100% of our kids will be lactase persistent, have wet earwax, & can taste bitter things. lol
[Edited on June 5, 2011 at 10:39 PM. Reason : one more thing]6/5/2011 10:34:49 PM |
Samwise16 All American 12710 Posts user info edit post |
Well, there's a perfect example of why I dislike am "meh" about these tests. Eye color is very hard to determine and has many influences besides recessive and dominant alleles. From what we have studied and I have gathered from recent studies, there's a lot of influence people never knew about and there is still no definitive answer as to what gives a person a certain color for eyes. Even with things like preimplantation genetic diagnosis, you can't predict what the eye color will be (and I'm not so sure they give you percentages)
[Edited on June 5, 2011 at 10:50 PM. Reason : I guess dislike is a strong word.]
[Edited on June 5, 2011 at 10:51 PM. Reason : .] 6/5/2011 10:50:05 PM |
se7entythree YOSHIYOSHI 17377 Posts user info edit post |
*sigh*
apparently you missed the ENTERTAINMENT part of my post. regardless of whether those percentages are correct, it makes no difference. i can't choose what my future child will have and there will be NO way to tell until it pops out. it's just FUN. 6/5/2011 10:56:03 PM |