The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has updated its guidance to recommend that doctors more readily prescribe and inform patients about medicine that prevents HIV called pre-exposure ...
The health professional gave an interview to ‘The Voice of Health’ in which he spoke in detail about this sexually ...
After decades of dashed hopes, AIDS vaccine developers are allowing themselves some cautious optimism. At a conference this week in Bangkok, Thailand, scientists reported molecular clues that help to ...
A major hurdle to curing people of HIV infection is the way the virus hides in a reservoir composed primarily of dormant immune cells. It is generally believed that HIV does not replicate in these ...
Researchers may have finally answered the question of why many antibodies that target the HIV envelope are still unable to stop the virus from spreading -- a troublesome stumbling block in the ...
One of the continuing mysteries of the HIV/AIDS epidemic is why women usually develop lower viral levels than men following acute HIV-1 infection but progress faster to AIDS than men with similar ...
World AIDS Day is observed on December 1st each year. This day is significant for raising awareness about HIV/AIDS and supporting individuals living with the virus. It provides an opportunity to ...
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infections are still fairly common and an estimated 40 million people worldwide are ...
The Trump administration's funding cuts to PEPFAR and USAID disrupted global HIV treatment and prevention, threatening progress made over decades. Lenacapavir's FDA approval as a long-acting ...
Four years ago, a team of research physicians at Weill Cornell Medicine began treatment for an HIV patient, in the hopes of finding a cure. This February marked 14 months since the patient was free of ...
Irvine, Calif. -- A new UC Irvine study sheds light on how HIV develops into AIDS and suggests a possible way to block the deadly transformation. UCI biologist Dominik Wodarz has shown for the first ...
A new study has revealed how stem cells can be used to amplify immune responses to HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. The work, published in the journal JCI Insight, describes how the use of mesenchymal ...