HIV cure 'within months': Danish scientists say HIV cure is within their grasp, Could an HIV cure really be within the grasp of researchers?
According to Danish scientists, the answer is yes. The GA Daily news on May 1 carried the story, originally reported on by The London Telegraph, in which Danish scientists went on record as saying they believe a cure for HIV is coming "within months."
Researchers at Aarhus University Hospital in Denmark are testing a new technique that involves flushing the virus from so-called reservoirs in human DNA. They are conducting clinical trials to test this “novel strategy” in which the HIV virus is literally stripped from human DNA and destroyed permanently by the immune system.
The virus, apart from the DNA, is theoretically destroyed naturally by the body's immune system, The London Telegraph reported.
According to the optimistic scientists, they are expecting results to show that "finding a mass-distributable and affordable cure to HIV is possible.”
Researchers are testing the theory on a minute scale – Human test studies are being done on fifteen patients only at this time.
If the test subjects show to be cured of the disease, the DNA-flushing technique will be tested on a wider scale.
Thirty-three million people worldwide are afflicted by the virus.
Dr. Ole Sogaard, a senior researcher in the department of infectious disease, remains cautious about over-optimism. He warned that the efficacy of the procedure in the human body remained unproven.
Medical Daily quoted him as telling the media:
"The challenge will be getting the patients' immune system to recognize the virus and destroy it. This depends on the strength and sensitivity of individual immune systems," Dr. Sogaard said.
According to Danish scientists, the answer is yes. The GA Daily news on May 1 carried the story, originally reported on by The London Telegraph, in which Danish scientists went on record as saying they believe a cure for HIV is coming "within months."
Researchers at Aarhus University Hospital in Denmark are testing a new technique that involves flushing the virus from so-called reservoirs in human DNA. They are conducting clinical trials to test this “novel strategy” in which the HIV virus is literally stripped from human DNA and destroyed permanently by the immune system.
The virus, apart from the DNA, is theoretically destroyed naturally by the body's immune system, The London Telegraph reported.
According to the optimistic scientists, they are expecting results to show that "finding a mass-distributable and affordable cure to HIV is possible.”
Researchers are testing the theory on a minute scale – Human test studies are being done on fifteen patients only at this time.
If the test subjects show to be cured of the disease, the DNA-flushing technique will be tested on a wider scale.
Thirty-three million people worldwide are afflicted by the virus.
Dr. Ole Sogaard, a senior researcher in the department of infectious disease, remains cautious about over-optimism. He warned that the efficacy of the procedure in the human body remained unproven.
Medical Daily quoted him as telling the media:
"The challenge will be getting the patients' immune system to recognize the virus and destroy it. This depends on the strength and sensitivity of individual immune systems," Dr. Sogaard said.
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