Sexual Health

Latest anti-retroviral drug therapies offer powerful solution for HIV infection-associated frailty

1 Mins read
Reading Time: < 1 minute

Large-scale clinical trial begins to study liver transplantation between people with HIVTreatment of the HIV/AIDS epidemic has seen remarkable advancements with the advent of the latest anti-retroviral drug therapy and powerful tools to test for drug resistance, making the infection almost “undetectable” in patients who strictly comply with their medication therapy, a just-published perspective article by a clinical team at the University of Arizona College of Medicine – Tucson points out.

Lead author Stephen A. Klotz, MD, professor in the Division of Infectious Diseases in the UA Department of Medicine, adds that in the past, HIV/AIDS patients often suffered from extreme frailty, in effect, often “aging 10 to 15 years” in appearance and function.   Read More

Related posts
Sexual Health

Revealed: The nation where you could be most likely to catch an STI...so who comes out on top?

1 Mins read
Reading Time: < 1 minute They are the third most commonly used form of contraception in the UK, behind the Pill and the hormonal implant, official data…
Sexual Health

Gonorrhoea could become 'untreatable' as cases of the STI reach record level

1 Mins read
Reading Time: < 1 minute An increasing number of people catching the sexually transmitted infection are finding it does not respond to antibiotics.  Read More
Sexual Health

The impact of HIV/AIDS and STIs on fertility: What Indian couples need to know

1 Mins read
Reading Time: < 1 minute Sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and reproductive tract infections (RTIs) are major global health issues, impacting quality of life, causing infertility, cancers, and…
Subscribe to our Blog

Let's stay in touch. Subscribe to our blog and get our best content in your inbox. 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.