Saturday, December 18, 2010

Case of HIV accidentally cured by stem cell transplant

A Human Immunodeficiency Virus optimistic man in Germany received a transplant of stem cells, which had the wonderful side impact of totally healing his HIV. Nonetheless, the treatment is only going to work with individuals that tend to have particular genes. There is nevertheless no full blown heal, and this treatment is not feasible to use yet. A large ample payday loan could finance researching to get more cures.

Curing man of Human Immunodeficiency Virus with stem cell transplant

Popular Science reports that an American man was living in Berlin when he was cured of Human Immunodeficiency Virus with a stem cell transplant. In 2007, the "Berlin patient," or Timothy Ray Brown, got the stem cell transplant. Curing his leukemia was the real purpose of it. The traces of HIV have disappeared entirely, as was discovered by monitoring him after the transplant. However, there is a hitch, in that only certain stem cells from certain individuals can work, and those cells are incredibly hard to discover.

Breed of cells hard to find

The stem cells in question have to be taken from a person who has a very specific gene. The gene being looked for has a component of white blood cells called CD4 receptor. It will lack the CCR5 receptor with this gene. The CCR5 receptor is one of the primary targets of Human Immunodeficiency Virus, or the Human Immunodeficiency Virus. If an individual has the gene that causes the CCR5 receptor to be absent, Human Immunodeficiency Virus can’t infiltrate white blood cells, and having the gene makes an individual immune to Human Immunodeficiency Virus. The hitch, of course, is also that only 1 percent of only Western and Northern European males are known to carry the gene, according to Fox News.

Impossible to cure

The therapy isn’t even close to being accessible. Brown had to go through years of painful treatments and immune system suppressing drugs in order to keep the transplanted stem cells from being rejected although the stem cell transplant did heal his leukemia as hoped. There aren't very many donors. Even so, the exact right donor has to be matched to you. It will cost a ton and be a huge experiment to get the painful treatment done.

Information from

Popular Science

popsci.com/science/article/2010-12/german-doctors-think-theyve-accidentally-cured-patients-hiv-stem-cell-transplant

Fox News

foxnews.com/health/2010/12/14/doctors-claim-hiv-positive-man-cured-stem-cell-transplant/



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