Tuesday, March 12, 2019

The (Potential) Miracle of the London Patient

I might be exaggerating but I am truly excited for this topic. I was watching one of my sources for news, Philip Defranco a journalist with a very prepared team. His show brought to my attention the use of bone marrow transplants and how they can help HIV and AIDS patients. You see, bone marrow makes blood cells and when your body is attacking itself and is unable to fight off infections from other conditions, a side effect of HIV, a transplant from another person can assist your creation of new cells. Researchers have found that some people have cells that are resistant to this effect and when their marrow is transplanted, it can lead to potential resistance in patients. This allowed the London patient to go into a remission or at the very least, stop the need for antiviral drugs. This is no reason to get out and party however as research is still ongoing, transplants do not last forever, and above all else; this really only helps individuals prevent the spread. This is not even considering that bone marrow is a donated tissue, requiring testing, and the hope that the resistance is there. AIDS and HIV do not get mentioned often in the news because of the antiviral drugs that can offer protection for those suffering. The last thing I heard was California's move to lower the penalty for knowingly expose someone to the condition, a move that blew my mind that anyone would do that. Any insight from our future doctors?

1 comment:

  1. I better understand the rationale, after reading the following, but I still think they're tone-deaf to the signal they're sending...

    “Legislators passed a number of laws three decades ago, at the height of the HIV epidemic, that criminalized behaviors of people living with HIV or added HIV-related penalties to existing crimes,” Wiener said. “These laws were based on fear and on the limited medical understanding of the time … In the decades since, societal and medical understanding of HIV has greatly improved. Effective treatments dramatically lengthen and improve the quality of life for people living with HIV — treatments that also nearly eliminate the possibility of transmission.”

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