CTindex - Christian Today UK Interactive Catalogue
Life

AIDS cocktails preserve brain, study finds

Cocktails of drugs widely used to treat infection with the AIDS virus appear to stop brain damage caused by HIV as well, researchers reported on Monday.

Posted: Tuesday, October 9, 2007, 9:59 (BST)
Font Scale:A A A

WASHINGTON - Cocktails of drugs widely used to treat infection with the AIDS virus appear to stop brain damage caused by HIV as well, researchers reported on Monday.

Writing in the journal Neurology, the researchers said their study also pointed to a way to measure this progressive brain damage when it does occur.

The AIDS drugs combinations, known as highly active antiretroviral therapy or HAART, suppress the virus but do not remove it completely from the body. Patients are not cured but their immune systems are not as badly damaged as untreated patients.

HIV can also attack the brain and nerves. Before HAART was available, about 20 percent of people with AIDS developed dementia. But not all of the drugs used in these mixtures get into the brain, so it was not clear how much they helped.

Dr. Asa Mellgren of Goteborg University in Sweden and colleagues studied 53 men and women infected with HIV. They tested their cerebrospinal fluid, then gave them HAART for one year.

Before treatment, 21 of the patients had high levels of a protein called neurofilament light protein, which was believed to point to brain damage.

After three months of taking HAART, those high levels of protein fell to normal levels in nearly half of the patients. After one year of treatment, only four people still had high levels of the protein, they reported.

All but one of the patients with normal levels remained normal for the year.

"This type of treatment appears to halt the neurodegenerative process caused by HIV," Mellgren said in a statement.

"This study confirms that neurofilament light protein serves as a useful marker in monitoring brain injury in people with HIV and in evaluating the effectiveness of HAART."



© Reuters 2007. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by caching, framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters.
Have your say on this article
Christian Aid Christmas
Google Advertisement
Externally generated - Report offensive links here
Universal Beneficent Society
World Headline
Pro-family group ends McDonald's boycott

Pro-family group ends McDonald's boycott

Pro-family groups this week lauded the recent decision by McDonald’s to no longer support the efforts of activists...
Sponsored Features
Inspire YOUR church to tackle poverty in YOUR community. Order a CAP Sunday FREE resource pack today! For holidays and retreats in the Scottish borders. Whitchester Christian Guest House 01450 377 477 Friendly printing company for churches, charities and businesses nationwide!
Google Advertisement
Externally generated - Report offensive links here