About
Bradford
  HIV/AIDS
Articles
  Alternative
Therapies
  HIV/AIDS
Videos
  HIV/AIDS
Links
  HIV/AIDS
News

Introduction:
Positively Positive
- Living with HIV
  Out
About
HIV
  Resume/
Curriculum Vitae:
HIV / AIDS Involvements
  Biography   HIV/AIDS
News Archive
HIV/AIDS News Bradford McIntyre
   



Kids Born With HIV Growing Up Well

April 20, 2011 - Once facing an almost certain death sentence, most children born with HIV are now faring well into adolescence and adulthood, according to a newly published study co-authored by Tulane infectious diseases expert Dr. Russell Van Dyke. The study was published in the Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes.

"About two thirds of these kids, at this point, don't have virus detectable in the blood," says Van Dyke, professor and chief of the section of pediatric infectious diseases. "While they are still infected and they are not cured, it's surprising how well they're doing, considering what they've been through."

The Pediatric HIV/AIDS Cohort Study is tracking the effects and complications of a lifetime of infection and its treatment. "We're not seeing the deaths we used to see due to infections, but we're starting to worry about longer-term complications," Van Dyke says. "Some of these complications may be related to the HIV itself, or some may be related to the medications these kids are on."

The complications that Van Dyke looks at in the study range from coronary artery disease to neurological and cognitive problems. He says that analyzing the long-term prognosis for these patients is a "nice problem to have," because it indicates that their disease can be treated as chronic, more akin to diabetes than cancer. Van Dyke expects many of the patients in his study to have a normal or near normal life span.

"These kids are doing very well," Van Dyke says. "They're going to school and doing all of the things that kids should do. Hopefully, they will be living 50 or 60 years or more, so what's going to happen 40 years from now is the real concern."

The other good news, according to Van Dyke, is that cases of newborns with HIV are becoming increasingly rare. Mother-to-baby transmission of HIV has been nearly eradicated because of advances in treatment.

###

 

Contact:
Arthur Nead
Phone: 504-247-1443
anead@tulane.edu

Source: Tulane University
http://tulane.edu/news/releases/pr_042011.cfm


"Reproduced with permission - Tulane University"

Tulane University
tulane.edu/


...positive attitudes are not simply 'moods'

Site Map

Contact Bradford McIntyre.

Web Design by Trevor Uksik

Copyright © 2003 - 2024 Bradford McIntyre. All rights reserved.

DESIGNED TO CREATE HIV & AIDS AWARENESS