homehome Home chatchat Notifications


New vaccine against HIV tested on volunteers, showed great promise

Seropositive volunteers participated in what can turn out to be a revolutionary test, conducted in Belgium, at the Antwerp Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp University Hospital and Antwerp University, involving a new therapeutic vaccine that uses cells from their own bodies; the cells are then charged and reinjected into their system. A cure for AIDS […]

Mihai Andrei
February 14, 2012 @ 1:26 pm

share Share

Seropositive volunteers participated in what can turn out to be a revolutionary test, conducted in Belgium, at the Antwerp Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp University Hospital and Antwerp University, involving a new therapeutic vaccine that uses cells from their own bodies; the cells are then charged and reinjected into their system.

A cure for AIDS has not been found, and it has to be said that it won’t be found tomorrow. However, thanks to the remarkable developments in the field of medicine, patients infected with the HIV virus can now live relatively normal lives, especially if they find the disease in its early stage. Of course, if more funds would have been invested in actual research instead of marketing, we would probably be in a totally different situation, but that’s another discussion.

The main problem with the HIV virus is that it creates an insufficient response of the body’s own dendritic cells (DCs, or antigen-presenting cells), responsible for transferring the information from the HIV virus to the CD8 cells (cytotoxic T cell), thus causing the destruction of the infected cells. But hematologists, virologists and HIV physicians in Antwerp teamed up and found what looks like a valid solution to the problem: they have ‘charged’ the dendritic cells of volunteers with messenger RNA for HIV proteins.

Human testing was, of course, the next logical step, so six volunteers received a four time, four week interval injected dose of dendritic cells extracted from themselves. The effect was encouraging: the cells started to recognize the virus more and more effectively, without any visible side effect. However, one might argue that six volunteers is not a satisfying number, and also, the HIV cells are well known for their ability in dodging the CD8 cells, so it will practically be a race to see who can adapt faster and win the battle. Hopefully, it won’t be HIV.

Via Doctor Tipster

share Share

This New Coating Repels Oil Like Teflon Without the Nasty PFAs

An ultra-thin coating mimics Teflon’s performance—minus most of its toxicity.

People in Thailand were chewing psychoactive nuts 4,000 years ago. It's in their teeth

The teeth Chico, they never lie.

We Might Be Ingesting Thousands of Lung-Penetrating Microplastics Daily in Our Homes and Cars — 100x More Than Previously Estimated

Microscopic plastic particles are everywhere and there's more than we thought.

This Scientist Stepped Thousands of Times on Deadly Snakes So You Don't Have To. What He Found Could Save Lives

This scientist is built different.

Scientists Say Junk Food Might Be as Addictive as Drugs

This is especially hurtful for kids.

Tooth nerves aren't just for pain. They also protect your teeth

We should be more thankful for what's in our mouths.

Temporary Tattoo Turns Red If Your Drink Has Been Spiked

This skin-worn patch can detect GHB in drinks in under one second

7,000 Steps a Day Keep the Doctor Away

Just 7,000 steps a day may lower your risk of death, dementia, and depression.

Amish Kids Almost Never Get Allergies and Scientists Finally Know Why

How Amish barns could hold the secret to preventing the onset of allergies.

Surgeons Found a Way to Resuscitate Dead Hearts and It Already Saved A Baby's Life

Can we reboot the human heart? Yes, we can, and this could save many dying babies and adults who are waiting for a transplant.