
HIV Support Group
HIV (also known as human immunodeficiency virus, and formerly known as HTLV-III and lymphadenopathy-associated virus) is a retrovirus that primarily infects vital components of the human immune system which can lead the syndrome known as AIDS. Many of the problems faced by people infected with HIV result from failure of the immune system to protect from opportunistic...

deleted_user
HIV entered U.S. from Haiti as early as '69: study
Updated Tue. Oct. 30 2007 9:51 AM ET
CTV.ca News Staff
The AIDS virus entered the United States via Haiti in about 1969 -- earlier than previously believed -- concludes new research.
"Once the virus got to the U.S., then it just moved explosively around the world," said senior study author Michael Worobey, an assistant professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at The University of Arizona.
The research, published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, is the first to definitively pinpoint when and from where HIV-1 entered the United States and shows that most HIV viruses in the U.S. descended from a single common ancestor.
The timeline laid out in the study suggests that HIV infections were occurring in the U.S. for roughly 12 years before AIDS was first recognized by scientists as a disease in 1981. By that point, of course, many people had died.
Worobey believes HIV developed in central Africa, perhaps as early as 1930, then moved to Haiti in the 1960s, where it mutated and flourished. It then moved to the U.S. and from there, the rest of the world.
The strain that migrated to the U.S. is called HIV-1 group M subtype B, and was the first human immunodeficiency virus discovered. It is the dominant strain of the AIDS virus in most countries, except sub-Saharan Africa.
To conduct the study, Worobey's team performed a genetic analysis of stored blood samples from the earliest AIDS patients, all of whom were recent immigrants from Haiti. The researchers also looked at genetic data from 117 more early AIDS patients from around the world.
Once all the genetic data was assembled, the researchers loaded it into a computer and used Bayesian statistics to analyze it.
For the hypothesis that HIV went from Africa to the U.S. first, the probability turned out to be 0.003 per cent -- virtually nil. For the hypothesis that HIV went from Africa first to Haiti and then on to the U.S., the probability is 99.8 per cent.
Worobey's team believes that HIV was brought to Haiti by an infected person from central Africa in about 1966, which matches earlier estimates. That unknown single infected Haitian immigrant then likely arrived in a large U.S. city like Miami or New York in 1969.
Since it can take several years after infection for a person to develop AIDS, the virus likely circulated for years before it manifested itself in AIDS.
HIV has gone on to infect tens of millions around the world and AIDS has killed more than 25 million people.
Learning more about the genetic make-up of the various strains of HIV could help vaccine development, Worobey said.
"The main challenge of developing a vaccine against HIV is its tremendous genetic diversity," he said.
Updated Tue. Oct. 30 2007 9:51 AM ET
CTV.ca News Staff
The AIDS virus entered the United States via Haiti in about 1969 -- earlier than previously believed -- concludes new research.
"Once the virus got to the U.S., then it just moved explosively around the world," said senior study author Michael Worobey, an assistant professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at The University of Arizona.
The research, published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, is the first to definitively pinpoint when and from where HIV-1 entered the United States and shows that most HIV viruses in the U.S. descended from a single common ancestor.
The timeline laid out in the study suggests that HIV infections were occurring in the U.S. for roughly 12 years before AIDS was first recognized by scientists as a disease in 1981. By that point, of course, many people had died.
Worobey believes HIV developed in central Africa, perhaps as early as 1930, then moved to Haiti in the 1960s, where it mutated and flourished. It then moved to the U.S. and from there, the rest of the world.
The strain that migrated to the U.S. is called HIV-1 group M subtype B, and was the first human immunodeficiency virus discovered. It is the dominant strain of the AIDS virus in most countries, except sub-Saharan Africa.
To conduct the study, Worobey's team performed a genetic analysis of stored blood samples from the earliest AIDS patients, all of whom were recent immigrants from Haiti. The researchers also looked at genetic data from 117 more early AIDS patients from around the world.
Once all the genetic data was assembled, the researchers loaded it into a computer and used Bayesian statistics to analyze it.
For the hypothesis that HIV went from Africa to the U.S. first, the probability turned out to be 0.003 per cent -- virtually nil. For the hypothesis that HIV went from Africa first to Haiti and then on to the U.S., the probability is 99.8 per cent.
Worobey's team believes that HIV was brought to Haiti by an infected person from central Africa in about 1966, which matches earlier estimates. That unknown single infected Haitian immigrant then likely arrived in a large U.S. city like Miami or New York in 1969.
Since it can take several years after infection for a person to develop AIDS, the virus likely circulated for years before it manifested itself in AIDS.
HIV has gone on to infect tens of millions around the world and AIDS has killed more than 25 million people.
Learning more about the genetic make-up of the various strains of HIV could help vaccine development, Worobey said.
"The main challenge of developing a vaccine against HIV is its tremendous genetic diversity," he said.
Posts You May Be Interested In
-
I gave my 2 week notice last Friday 13th. Now to join you fine people in a life of leisure and nothing else to do but to look out for myself....is it just me or does that sound pretty boring? My goal was to live to retire and I guess having to take early retirement because of health reasons wasn't exactly the way I had planned things. I just can't stay in that building that is reeking mildew...
-
I'm trying to exercise daily. I was doing fairly well until I sprained my ankle 2 weeks ago but now I'm getting back on the horse. Today I walked over a mile with my arm weights that are about 22lbs total. I was out of shape and it was hard on my arms. I also did my 30 situps. I'm also going to drink a lot of water and try to eat healthy. I do tend to have a sweet tooth but I'm cutting...
true or untrue, partly true, it is not complete to say it hopped a jet from haiti, until we find out how it got into haitian blood to begin with.
let us not fall prey to suffice that if it came to us from there, that it is not just as important to find out how it got THERE.
this is a tiny planet, i am not satified that it came from 'there, when in fact, in todays small world, we realise with simple wisdon that it's all one 'here', to begin with.... if im not mistaken.
: )