AIDS Health Article

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Diagnosis

In the early stages of infection, HIV often causes no symptoms and the infection can be diagnosed only by testing a person's blood. Two tests are available to diagnose HIV infection, one that looks for the presence of antibodies produced by the body in response to HIV and the other that looks for the virus itself. Antibodies are proteins produced by the body whenever a disease threatens it. When the body is infected with HIV, it produces antibodies specific to HIV. The first test, called ELISA (enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay), looks for such antibodies in the blood.

A positive ELISA has to be confirmed by another test called western blot or immunofluorescent assay (IFA). All positive tests by ELISA are not accurate and hence, western blot and repeated tests are necessary to confirm a person's HIV status. A person infected with HIV is termed HIV positive or seropositive.

Rapid tests that give results in five to 30 minutes are increasingly being used worldwide. The accuracy of rapid tests is stated to be as good as that of ELISA. Though rapid tests are more expensive, researchers have found them to be more cost effective in terms of the number of people covered and the time the tests take.

The HIV antibodies generally do not reach detectable levels in the blood until about three months after infection. This period, from the time of infection until the blood is tested positive for antibodies, is called the window period. Sometimes, the antibodies might take up to six months to be detected. Even if the tests are negative, during the window period the amount of virus is very high in an infected person. If a person is newly infected, therefore, the risk of transmission is higher.

Another test for HIV is called polymerase chain reaction (PCR), which looks for HIV itself in the blood. This test, which recognizes the presence of the virus' genetic material in the blood, can detect the virus within a few days of infection. There are also tests like radio immuno precipitation assay (RIPA), a confirmatory blood test that may be used when antibody levels are difficult to detect or when western blot test results are uncertain.

Treatment team

The treatment team often includes personal care-givers, physical therapists, dietitians, specialists (infectious disease specialists, dermatologists, nephrologists, ophthalmologists, pediatrists, psychiatrists, and neurologists), and social workers.

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Author Info: Greiciane Gaburro Paneto, Brenda Wilmoth Lerner RN, Iuri Drumond Louro MD, PhD, The Gale Group Inc., Gale, Detroit, Gale Encyclopedia of Neurological Disorders, 2005
 
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