HIV AIDS:
Many people don't really understand how HIV and AIDS are related, even though they hear these two words used together all the
time.
HIV stands for human immunodeficiency virus. AIDS stands for acquired
immunodeficiency syndrome. HIV is actually the virus that causes the disease AIDS.
HIV Hurts the Immune System
People who are HIV positive have been tested and found to have signs of the human immunodeficiency virus in their blood. HIV destroys part of
the immune system. Specifically, it affects a type of white blood cell called the T lymphocyte, or T cell. T cells are one type of "fighter" cell
in the blood that help the body fight off all kinds of germs and diseases.
After HIV enters the body, it piggybacks onto a T cell and works its way inside of that cell. Once inside, the virus completely takes over the
T cell and uses it as a virus-making factory to make a lot of copies of itself.
The newly made viruses then leave the T cell and go on to infect and destroy other healthy T cells as they continue to multiply inside the
body. After the virus invades the T cells, they can no longer properly fight infections.
Someone who is infected with the virus is called HIV positive. But it may take years for the virus to damage enough T cells for that person to
get sick and develop AIDS.
And thanks to new medications, someone infected with HIV can stay relatively healthy and symptom-free for many years. But these medications
are very expensive and not available to everyone in the world.
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