Mar302008
Finally, new treatments for AIDS control
Researchers discover treatment 'Mnaia' blood cells contain mixed with parts of the virus that causes AIDS control of the killer disease.
Australian researchers said Friday that a new type of treatment trains the immune system cells to identify better on the AIDS virus may help to control this deadly contagious disease, an incurable disease.
The show tests conducted on monkeys infected with a similar treatment that controls the virus although it did not cure him and that he already planned to conduct tests for this treatment on humans.
He said Stephen you from the University of Melbourne and his colleagues that this treatment is known for short as "Opal" and expected classified as a technical treatment of immune or what is called a therapeutic vaccine. And wrote in the periodic Public Library of Science, saying that the treatment includes the patient's blood cells mixed with very small portions of protein the virus. Then re-injected these cells in the patient after that.
And wrote, saying that "levels of virus in monkeys that were vaccinated were less tenfold compared with a control and that lasted for a year after the initial vaccinations."
"The immune therapy to lower mortality from AIDS. And conclude that this technique treat immunological and prepared. Testing is planned for this treatment on humans infected in any Watch."
The AIDS virus struck more than 33 million people worldwide and caused 25 million deaths since the identification in the eighties.
While there is no cure or vaccine for this virus there is a mixture of drugs could control the virus. But it has side effects and expensive and depends positive impact in the end.
And I was secretly taking a small group of virus called Beptaidz dishes and placed in laboratories with the blood of the entire immune system or through isolated.
This helped to train cells to recognize and attack the virus more effectively as the researchers wrote in the journal.
Researchers discover treatment 'Mnaia' blood cells contain mixed with parts of the virus that causes AIDS control of the killer disease.
Australian researchers said Friday that a new type of treatment trains the immune system cells to identify better on the AIDS virus may help to control this deadly contagious disease, an incurable disease.
The show tests conducted on monkeys infected with a similar treatment that controls the virus although it did not cure him and that he already planned to conduct tests for this treatment on humans.
He said Stephen you from the University of Melbourne and his colleagues that this treatment is known for short as "Opal" and expected classified as a technical treatment of immune or what is called a therapeutic vaccine. And wrote in the periodic Public Library of Science, saying that the treatment includes the patient's blood cells mixed with very small portions of protein the virus. Then re-injected these cells in the patient after that.
And wrote, saying that "levels of virus in monkeys that were vaccinated were less tenfold compared with a control and that lasted for a year after the initial vaccinations."
"The immune therapy to lower mortality from AIDS. And conclude that this technique treat immunological and prepared. Testing is planned for this treatment on humans infected in any Watch."
The AIDS virus struck more than 33 million people worldwide and caused 25 million deaths since the identification in the eighties.
While there is no cure or vaccine for this virus there is a mixture of drugs could control the virus. But it has side effects and expensive and depends positive impact in the end.
And I was secretly taking a small group of virus called Beptaidz dishes and placed in laboratories with the blood of the entire immune system or through isolated.
This helped to train cells to recognize and attack the virus more effectively as the researchers wrote in the journal.
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