Characterization of the HIV epidemic in Thailand has benefited from the systematic testing of young men upon entry into the military. These data, which have shown that public health measures can reverse an HIV epidemic, have been reanalyzed with current geographic information systems methods. The resulting maps are, thus far, the best means of visualizing the geography of the dynamic HIV epidemic in Thailand.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoutheast Asian J Trop Med Public Health
March 2001
The recent fourth-generation enzyme-immunoassays have been used to increase the sensitivity for detecting HIV-1 antibodies and reduce the window period of HIV infection. The HIV antigens utilized in those assays were prepared from HIV-1 clade B which is different from HIV-1 subtypes circulating in Thailand. We evaluated 323 HIV-1 seropositives either B or E subtype to determine whether they were detected with the new combined anti-HIV and the p24 Ag assay.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeither the seroprevalence of HIV-2 nor the sensitivity of enzyme immunoassays for the detection of antibodies to this retrovirus have been defined in Thailand. We, therefore, Investigated these enigmas using banked sera previously screened for HIV-1 by a test that did not distinguish between HIV-1 and HIV-2. All 1,013 HIV-seroreactive specimens were positive to HIV-1 on retesting, and 740 (73%) were reactive to both HIV-1 and HIV-2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe two prevalent subtypes of HIV-1 circulating in Thailand are subtypes E and B. While the most prevalent subtype continues to be E using molecular typing assays, immunologically, a subset of subtype E-infected patients (3.4% in 1997) have binding antibodies to both the E and B V3 loops in a peptide ELISA.
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