日批在线视频_内射毛片内射国产夫妻_亚洲三级小视频_在线观看亚洲大片短视频_女性向h片资源在线观看_亚洲最大网

   

Experts test drugs to fight neuroAIDS

(AP)
Updated: 2006-10-03 08:36

It's an Achilles' heel of HIV therapy: The AIDS virus can sneak into the brain to cause dementia, despite today's best medicines.

Now scientists are beginning to test drugs that may protect against the memory loss and other symptoms of so-called neuroAIDS, which afflicts at least one in five people with HIV and is becoming more common as patients live longer.

With almost 1 million Americans, and almost 40 million people worldwide, living with HIV, that's a large and underrecognized toll.

"That means HIV is the commonest cause of cognitive dysfunction in young people worldwide," says Dr. Justin McArthur, vice chairman of neurology at Baltimore's Johns Hopkins University, who treats neuroAIDS. "There's no question it's a major public health issue."

While today's most powerful anti-HIV drugs do help by suppressing levels of the virus in blood-so that there's less to continually bathe the brain-they can't cure neuroAIDS. Why? HIV seeps into the brain very soon after someone is infected, and few anti-HIV drugs can penetrate the brain to chase it down.

"Despite the best efforts of (anti-HIV) therapy, brain is failing," says Dr. Harris Gelbard, a neurologist at the University of Rochester Medical Center. He is part of a major new effort funded by the National Institutes of Health to find the first brain-protecting treatments.

What's now called neuroAIDS is much different from the AIDS dementia of the epidemic's early years, when patients often had horrific brain symptoms similar to end-stage Alzheimer's, unable to move or talk. They'd die within six months.

Today, anti-HIV medication has resulted in a more subtle dementia that strikes four years or more before death: At first, patients forget phone numbers and their movements slow. They become less able to juggle multiple tasks.

Some worsen until they can't hold a job or perform other activities, but not everyone worsens-and doctors can't predict who will. In a vicious cycle, the memory loss makes many forget their anti-HIV pills, so the virus rebounds.

Gelbard estimates that neuroAIDS reduces patients' mental function by 25 percent.

If HIV patients live long enough, many specialists worry, nearly all of them may suffer at least some brain symptoms.

"They're living longer with HIV in the brain," explains Kathy Kopnisky of the NIH's National Institute of Mental Health, which is spending about $60 million investigating neuroAIDS. "And they're aging, so they're going through the normal brain aging-related processes" that can make people vulnerable to Alzheimer's and other brain diseases.

Biologically, this is a different type of dementia from any caused by Alzheimer's or Parkinson's, and drugs for those brain-degenerating diseases so far are proving disappointing against neuroAIDS.

So the government-funded attack has two fronts:

First, figure out which of the powerful anti-HIV cocktails are the best bet for HIV patients with memory problems.

A few of today's HIV-suppressing drugs, such as nevirapine, abacavir, AZT and indinavir, can penetrate the blood-brain barrier, says Dr. Ron Ellis of the University of California, San Diego.

But no one knows if using those drugs instead of others will slow the brain damage once neuroAIDS symptoms begin. Early next year, Ellis will begin a study of 120 such patients-at UCSD, Hopkins and Washington University in St. Louis-to try to tell, by randomly assigning them to either a brain-penetrating cocktail or different drugs.

Second, find drugs that protect nerve cells from the inflammation-triggered toxic chain reaction that seems to be how HIV wreaks its damage.

Topping the candidates are the epilepsy drug valproic acid and lithium, a drug long used in manic-depression. Both inhibit an enzyme, called GSK-3b. The body normally makes the enzyme, but too much is poisonous. In the brain, HIV knocks that careful balancing act out of whack, leading to death of connections key to memory and other neuronal functions.

In a recent pilot study, Gelbard found tantalizing signs that valproic acid might increase brain connections in a few neuroAIDS patients, and improve their symptoms. He's about to begin a second-stage study to try to tell if the effect is real; a similar pilot trial with lithium is under way.

Seeking a one-two punch, Gelbard also hopes to soon begin a human study of an experimental drug that targets a second inflammatory protein that HIV uses, this one to trigger brain cells to kill themselves.

 
 

Related Stories
 
主站蜘蛛池模板: 成年人在线观看视频网站 | 香蕉视频免费在线播放 | 妞干网这里只有精品 | 可以免费在线观看的av | 日韩一级精品 | 在线aaa| 九九一级片 | 日韩大毛片 | 国产丝袜在线 | h网站在线播放 | 日批在线看 | 超碰在线人人草 | 亚洲一区二区免费视频 | 最新国产精品视频 | 一区二区免费 | 成人在线小视频 | 金8天国av | 天堂在线一区二区 | 成人在线网 | 玖玖精品视频 | 99久久成人 | 麻豆av免费看 | h视频网站在线观看 | 极品久久久久久久 | 日韩国产在线 | 欧美在线专区 | 欧美中文字幕第一页 | 久久精品国产精品亚洲精品色 | 午夜九九| 日本免费黄色 | 亚洲视频h| 影音先锋男人色资源网 | 91精品影视 | 欧美色国 | 欧美大胆a | 青草草在线视频 | 亚洲一级影院 | 成年人黄色免费网站 | 91免费观看 | 欧美啪啪一区 | 国产第5页|