HIV info

HIV
Imagine being shot with the same needle that someone else used, now you are HIV positive and there’s nothing that you can do to reverse the process. There’s a slim chance that the disease will disappear and there’s no cure. This is what’s happening in places that you may not even expect. HIV has many symptoms, it can be prevented, and there’s no cure that will kill the virus. HIV/AID’s is a very easy thing to consume without taking the right precautions.
The disease can be prevented easily. Having sex unprotected with someone that is HIV positive will make you catch the disease. This can be prevented easily by using condoms weather it’s male or female. Needle sharing can also make you contain HIV if the person is HIV positive also. There is no vaccine affective in destroying the disease. Therapeutic helps prevents the HIV from spreading, however you always want to get tested when you may think you have the disease, or when you are with a different partner. Protease inhibitors cripple the process of the spread by making it go slowly through the blood stream. This drug should be taken every day at the same time each day. This will at least give you a few more years before HIV actually starts taken its roll.
Not taking safety measures is how you can catch the disease. The disease can be transmitted by sharing needles. People that do illegal drugs or anything related to sharing blood, like blood transfusions, or any type of blood to blood contacts can be very harmful to you. Failure to the immune system causes AID’s. An unusual type of lung disease called phenomena which meant different types of microorganisms, including bacteria, viruses, and fungi.  While HIV infection is required to develop AIDS, the actual definition of AIDS is the development of a low CD4 cell count.
HIV was diagnosed as AID’s in 1981. It doesn’t have symptoms at first, however you may start to feel bloated, and have swollen lungs or aching muscles. These may be natural to you because symptoms occur like that every day or once in a while, that’s why we urge for you to see the doctor. HIV attacks the body in three processes, immunodeficiency, autoimmunity, nervous system dysfunction. HIV is tested through blood tests from the EHSA. The EHSA goes through a series of tests that involve taking some of the blood out of the human body and testing it for different type of blood cells. If you have a certain type of blood cell like the lymphocytes. HIV started in Africa then spread all over the world in no later than 3 years.
HIV is a worldwide virus. AID’s is most common in people from the age of 25-44. It is mostly common in males, however women get the symptoms faster, and it attacks the female body quicker. Blood transfusion is the main cause of why HIV is worldwide virus. More than 3.1 million people die each year from AIDS. People that prostitute, are do any illegal activity that is body to body contact, or blood to blood contacts can have a serious risk of getting the disease.
If you don’t go to the hospital to get checked when needed then you may never even know you have the disease. HIV causes headaches, bloating, sore throats and swollen glands. Shortly after primary infection, most individuals enter a period of many years where they have no symptoms at all. During this time, CD4 cells may gradually decline, and with this decline in the immune system, patients may develop the mild symptoms of HIV such as vaginal or oral candidacies thrush. However after the pain goes away you may never even have any symptoms at all. HIV when diagnosed may feel as worse as influenza than it may be as quick as a cold.
HIV is a non curable disease. The prognosis of the disease is getting better because there or many antibiotics that help the disease slow down the process of destroying your immune system.  It is the most devastating public outbreak in history. Protease inhibitors, integrase inhibitors,   Entry inhibitors, including fusion inhibitors, help slow down the immune system and destroy some of the cells. HIV must use a person's own cells to reproduce. However, HIV is a little different from other viruses because it must first convert its genetic material from RNA to DNA. It is the DNA genes that allow HIV to multiply. 
HIV is still around today. The most recent outbreak is in 2012 in Nigeria. In some of the hospitals in Nigeria they do not take the right precautions to keep their patients safe. Some of the hospitals use the same needles on other patients and barely even clean them.  In, Nigeria an estimated 3.6 percent of the population are living with HIV. This has been a leading factor for AID’s to travel the world.  If you are always getting checked out and keeping yourself safe then there should be no problem about having HIV.
In conclusion, HIV is very deadly disease. There is no cure, and it screws up you immune system. Many people may have the disease without even knowing it. Once you have symptoms then it is very hard to cure it. There are medicine techniques that you can use, however they only slow up the virus from getting to the immune system. That is why it is very important to get checked whenever you feel the need to, and always be protected.




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