Our Services

Get 15% Discount on your First Order

[rank_math_breadcrumb]

Biology

Explain the different joints in osteology 

“Transforming Lives through Quality Education”
Page 1 of 8

EGERTON UNIVERSITY

COLLEGE OF OPEN AND DISTANCE LEARNING

E-CAMPUS

ZOOL 143: Biology of HIV/AIDS and Society

Topic 1 Handout

Copyright
Copyright© Egerton University

Published 2020

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a

retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical,

photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the

copyright owner.

“Transforming Lives through Quality Education”
Page 2 of 8

Topic One: Introduction To Hiv And Aids

Introduction

HIV/AIDS is a global pandemic and national disaster. HIV attacks the human

body and gradually weakens the immunity, the ability of the body to defend itself

against diseases. Have you ever heard of HIV/AIDS? Do you know of anyone

infected and/or affected by this disease? What are some of the challenges caused

by HIV/AIDS? Do you understand the difference between HIV and AIDS? Which

one comes earlier, HIV or AIDS? Is knowledge a vital weapon in the fight against

HIV/AIDS? These are some of the questions that we focus in this introductory

topic. We take you through the definition of the terms (HIV and AIDS), examine

the link between the two and the challenge posed by the pandemic. Welcome.

Learning Outcomes

By the end of this topic you should be able to:

i. Differentiate between HIV and AIDS,

ii. Explain the challenges posed by the pandemic

iii. Explain the significance of knowledge in the fight against the pandemic.

iv. Describe the history and origin of HIV.

1.0 Definition of Terms

HIV

HIV stands for Human Immunodeficiency Virus.

This particular virus was discovered in the mid-1980s and belongs to a group of

viruses called retroviruses.

HIV attacks the immune system, and gradually causes damage. This can mean that

a person infected with HIV is at risk of developing some serious infections and

cancers that a healthy immune system can fight off. When a person develops

certain illnesses and cancers, they are said to have developed AIDS.

AIDS

“Transforming Lives through Quality Education”
Page 3 of 8

AIDS stands for Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome. AIDS is the name used

to describe a combination of potentially life-threatening infections and cancers,

which can develop when someone’s immune system has been damaged by HIV.

Prevalence

Prevalence is the number of people living with HIV infection at the end of a given

year.

Incidence

Incidence is the number of new HIV infections that occur during a given year.

Link btw HIV & AIDS

-AIDS is the name used to describe a combination of potentially life-threatening

infections and cancers that can develop in people who have HIV.

-Over time, infection with HIV damages the immune system. This means that the

body cannot fight off a number of serious infections and cancers, which are

sometimes called ‘AIDS-defining’.

-Just because you are diagnosed with an AIDS-defining illness doesn’t mean that

you are going to die. Many of these illnesses can be cured or managed.

The Challenge

-In 2009, 1.8 million people died from HIV/AIDS and another 2.6 million people

were infected with the virus. Sub-Saharan Africa has been hit harder by

HIV/AIDS than any other region in the world. Two-thirds of people living with

HIV/AIDS and three-quarters of deaths from HIV/AIDS are in sub-Saharan

Africa.

-People with AIDS don’t suffer alone. The disease also attacks their families and

communities. 14.8 million African children have already lost one or both parents

to HIV/AIDS.

“Transforming Lives through Quality Education”
Page 4 of 8

-The disease targets people during their most productive years, making economic

progress in many sub-Saharan African countries even more of a challenge.

-Unfortunately, HIV/AIDS has neither a cure nor vaccine at present. Until a

vaccine or a cure is found, our greatest weapon against HIV/AIDS is knowledge.

Importance of Learning about HIV/AIDS

➢ Learning about HIV/AIDS can empower people to make decisions that can

minimize the risk of exposure to HIV/AIDS and help prevent its spread.

➢ Education is the first of self-protection, community improvement, and

empowerment.

➢ The information in this book is also designed to help those individuals

already living with HIV/AIDS in the world today.

➢ It is a resource for everyone to learn how to support friends, family

members, and community members who have HIV/AIDS.

1.2 History of HIV/AIDS

AIDS has been around for at least several decades. It is estimated to first have

infected humans in the 1910’s and 1920’s. The virus spread to humans from

primates, as is the case for many diseases. These types of diseases are called

zoonoses (the singular form is “zoonosis”). Hunting, eating, and domesticating

animals can all create situations where microbes have the opportunity to exchange

animal hosts for humans. Humans have been infected by zoonoses for thousands

of years. HIV and SARS are some recent examples. HIV-1 probably originated in

chimpanzees, which then transferred it to humans.HIV-2, a separate virus that can

also cause AIDS, originated in another primate-the sooty monkey.

1981 to 1991

In 1981, scientists first identified AIDS. This happened in the United States,

where researchers observed a sudden surge in opportunistic diseases in patients

with no prior history of immune system problems. Opportunistic diseases are

diseases that do not cause major problems in healthy individuals, but flourish in

the absence of a functional immune system. One example of an opportunistic

“Transforming Lives through Quality Education”
Page 5 of 8

disease is Pneumocystis carinii (PCP) Pneumonia. When the researchers further

examined the patients suffering from these infections, they found that indeed their

immune systems were damaged. Some new, hitherto unknown disease had to be at

work.

The new disease was given the name Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome. By

studying the patterns of this new disease, doctors and epidemiologists came to the

conclusion that it was probably caused by a virus. In 1982, the Human

Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) was identified as the cause of the disease, and two

years later it was isolated by French and American researchers.

In the United States around the time of the discovery, the major afflicted group in

the population was male homosexuals. Another group in which HIV was prevalent

was intravenous drug users. Heterosexual non drug-users were also infected, but

were not focused on by researchers. In 1983, the scientific community in western

countries was first confronted with evidence for an epidemic in Africa that

afflicted mostly homosexuals. This led to the realization that this new disease had

the capability of affecting everyone, but just some sub groups in the population.

By 1985, at least one case of AIDS had been reported in every region of the

world. In the years shortly afterwards, the growth of HIV/AIDS awareness on a

global scale could be observed. For example, the world Health Organization

started it Special Program on AIDS. Also, in 1987 the first AIDS therapy, AZT,

was introduced in the United States.

1991 to Present

During this period, the epidemic surges. After the first decade of the pandemic,

roughly 15 million people were living with the disease. (This is a measure of

prevalence, or total number of people infected. Another way of tracking a disease

is to look at incidence, which is the number of new cases within a given period of

time.). The first success in reducing rates in a developing country was observed in

Uganda in 1993. Prevalence in young pregnant women began to decrease. In

recent years, Thailand and Brazil have brought down their rates. Globally,

however, the number of infected people keeps rising.

In 1993, scientists develop the first regime to prevent mother-to-child

transmission. Two years later, Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy (HAART)

“Transforming Lives through Quality Education”
Page 6 of 8

is introduced. (See chapter on Treatment). In that same year, UNAIDS, a body of

the United Nations specifically dealing with the AIDS epidemic, was created.

In 2001, twenty years after scientists first identified HIV, some 337 million people

were living with HIV/AIDS. Now this figure is even higher-42 million is the most

recent estimate. More and more therapies are being developed, but none of them

can cure the disease. Moreover, many of them are only available to a very small

percentage of infected individuals because of their high costs. The epidemic is far

from over.

1.3 Origin of HIV

a. The natural transfer theory (The hunter Theory)

-States that HIV began to infect humans after it was transferred from an infected

primate to a human. This transfer likely occurred when hunters came into contact

with infected blood of an infected primate through scratches, bites, and cutting the

animal for meat.

-It’s based on the genetic similarity between HIV and SIV (Simian

Immunodeficiency Virus).

b. The oral polio vaccine (OPV) theory

It suggests that HIV can be traced to the testing of an oral polio vaccine called

Chat, given to about a million people in the Belgian Congo, Ruanda and Burundi

in the late 1950s. To be reproduced, live polio vaccine needs to be cultivated in

living tissue, and Hooper’s belief is that Chat was grown in kidney cells taken

from local chimps infected with SIVcmz. This, he claims, would have resulted in

the contamination of the vaccine with chimp SIV, and a large number of people

subsequently becoming infected with HIV-1.

Many people have contested Hooper’s theories and insist that local chimps were

not infected with a strain of SIVcmz that is closely linked to HIV. Furthermore,

the oral administration of the vaccine would seem insufficient to cause infection in

most people (SIV/HIV needs to get directly into the bloodstream to cause

“Transforming Lives through Quality Education”
Page 7 of 8

infection – the lining of the mouth and throat generally act as good carriers to the

virus).

In February 2000 the Wistar Institute in Philadelphia (one of the original

manufacturers of the Chat vaccine) announced that it had discovered in its stores a

phial of polio vaccine that had been used as part of the program. The vaccine was

subsequently analyzed and in April 2001 it was announced that no trace had been

found of either HIV or chimpanzee SIV.7 A second analysis confirmed that only

macaque monkey kidney cells, which cannot be infected with SIV or HIV, were

used to make Chat.8 While this is just one phial of many, it means that the OPV

theory remains unproven.

c. The conspiracy Theory (HIV as man-made Product)

-It states that HIV was manufactured in the laboratory as part of a biological

warfare program, designed to wipe out large numbers of black and homosexual

people.

-This theory has been disapproved on the grounds that there were no genetic

engineering techniques at that time of emergence of AIDS.

d. The colonialism theory

During the late 19th and early 20th century, much of Africa was ruled by colonial

forces. In areas such as French Equatorial Africa and the Belgian Congo, colonial

rule was particularly harsh and many Africans were forced into labour camps

where sanitation was poor, food was scarce and physical demands were extreme.

These factors alone would have been sufficient to create poor health in anyone, so

SIV could easily have infiltrated the labour force and taken advantage of their

weakened immune systems to become HIV. A stray and perhaps sick chimpanzee

with SIV would have made a welcome extra source of food for the workers.

“SIV could easily have infiltrated the labour force and taken advantage of their

weakened immune systems”

e. The contaminated needle theory

In the 1950s, the use of disposable plastic syringes became commonplace around

the world as a cheap, sterile way to administer medicines.

“Transforming Lives through Quality Education”
Page 8 of 8

However, to African healthcare professionals working on inoculation and other

medical programmes, the huge quantities of syringes needed would have been

very costly. It is therefore likely that one single syringe would have been used to

inject multiple patients without any sterilization in between.

This would rapidly have transferred any viral particles (within a hunter’s blood for

example) from one person to another, creating huge potential for the virus to

mutate and replicate in each new individual it entered, even if the SIV within the

original person infected had not yet converted to HIV.

Topic Summary

• In this topic, we have learned that HIV is virus that weakens human

immunity.

• AIDS is a word that describes a combination of potentially life-threatening

infections and cancers, which can develop when someone’s immune system

has been damaged by HIV.

• HIV/AIDS was discovered in 1981 and its origin can be traced from

primates, the Oral polio vaccine, conspiracy theory, colonialism and the

contaminated needle theory.

Further Reading

• Talaro KP, 2007. Foundations in Microbiology, Basic Principles. 6th

edition. McGraw-Hill International.

• William L, Anderson WL, Janeway C and Travers P. 2001.

Immunology, The immune System in Health and Disease. 5th edition,

Garland Publishing, Inc.

Share This Post

Email
WhatsApp
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
Reddit

Order a Similar Paper and get 15% Discount on your First Order

Related Questions

consumer health bibliography

See Modules for related materials. Remember that the annotated bibliography requires THREE different summaries of THREE different articles from PEER REVIEWED journals that relate to consumer health.  PLEASE read all instructions, templates, rubrics, feedback from one article, and announcements pertaining to the annotated bib.  You have been sent a definition

PPP

As Creswell and Creswell (2023, pp. 28) explain in Chapter 2—citing Cooper (2010) and Marshall & Rossman (2022)—a literature review brings context to the research by identifying questions that have not been answered through the literature. Please refer to the webpage  Writing a Literature ReviewLinks to an external site.  to

BIOLOGY WEEK 4 APPLICATION

Figure 14.27 (Below) illustrates the tragic story of the Atlantic Cod fishery. Do some research on the Chesapeake Bay fishery, and write a position paper on what the Chesapeake Fishery consists of, what is it’s state of health (i.e., where does it stand regarding comparison to the cod fishery), and

BIOLOGY DIALOGUE WEEK 4

Week 4 Dialogue: Parasitism and Mutualism There are many interesting examples of parasitism and mutualism in which there exists a very specific interactions between two very specific species. Some of these interactions are so specific and so intertwined between the two species that they cannot exist without one another. This

New

.  2 Finance Report: Company Name by Joe Smith FIN 2000 Principles of Finance Valencia College March 31, 2014 Table of Contents Introduction 3 History 3 Main Products or Services 3 Key Executives 3 Financial Statements 4 Income Statement 4 Balance Sheet 4 Statement of Cash Flows 4 Stock Analysis

Master the Slide in Drift Boss

Get ready to defy gravity and conquer the curves in [url= Boss[/url] , the addictive, one-tap phenomenon that transforms simple steering into a high-octane obsession! Forget complicated controls; in this game, your only task is to “click to drift,” perfectly timing your slides around sharp, endless corners. The premise is

Bio report

Can someone get this done for me before November 15th  [removed]

Kayseri Firma Rehberi

 iyisinerede.com – “Kayseri’yi keşfetmenin en kolay yolu.” Sen de şehrini daha yakından tanımak, güncel fırsatları kaçırmamak ve yerel işletmeleri desteklemek istiyorsan hemen ziyaret et: ???? www.iyisinerede.com 

Nutrition Project Part 2: Nutrition on a Budget

2 Paper Title Author Galen College of Nursing Course Name/Section Number Professor Due Date Part 1- RDA Values for Chosen Scenario: Start by providing a brief overview of the scenario that is being used for this assignment. Insert a chart outlining all RDAs for the macro and micronutrients for your

BIOL240 D

SEE ATTACHMENTS Week 3 Dialogue: Human Population Growth This week your Discussion Board will center on human population growth. I want you to find the K value, i.e., the carrying capacity, of earth for humans. Then I want you to choose some interesting aspects of this topic related to the

BIOL240 A

SEE ATTACHMENTS For your practical application this week, we will look into an actual scientific study- the field studies of T. Scott SilIett on pages 230 and 231 of your text. After reading about and understanding what Sillett did, you will write a scientific paper describing the field study. For

jkjkj

6  Please choose from the following: · Interview 2 to 3 individuals from different cultures or religions and compare and contrast their views on death and dying. · Interview an individual who has experienced a loss and discuss their experience in terms of the stages of grieving.    · Interview

Al Qulub Trust Helping Humanity With Compassion

 Al Qulub Trust stands as a symbol of hope and compassion It is more than just a charity it is a movement of love and care that touches hearts and transforms lives By supporting Al Qulub Trust every person becomes part of a greater mission to heal the world through

Task

See Task document and attachments · One full page but no more than two pages total · APA style guidelines · this is a reflection paper, remember that your paper should be grounded in the material covered in this course section · Please cite any referred material in-text and on