AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses
May 1999
A relatively low and stable seroprevalence of HIV-1 was previously reported among pregnant women attending for antenatal care between 1988 and 1993 in Kimpese, a rural town in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC, formerly Zaire). To characterize the HIV-1 subtypes circulating in this area, we have examined a 330-bp fragment of the p17 region of the gag gene of HIV-1 strains obtained from 70 patients (55 mothers, 15 children), of whom 61 were epidemiologically unlinked. Phylogenetic analyses revealed the existence of at least seven HIV-1 subtypes within the Kimpese region.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Since 1991, unlinked anonymous HIV testing of homosexual/bisexual males attending genitourinary clinics in Edinburgh and Glasgow has been conducted and resulting prevalence data have been published annually. More detailed information which provides an understanding of what proportion of HIV infected men attending genitourinary clinics in central Scotland (i) remain undetected, (ii) acquire sexually transmitted infections following HIV diagnosis, and (iii) possibly become HIV infected either abroad or following sex with someone from abroad, is reported by the authors.
Methods: Unlinked anonymous HIV testing of syphilis serology specimens from homosexual/bisexual males attending genitourinary clinics during 1991-5.
Cytotoxic T cells are believed to be an important immune response in HIV infection, both in the initial response to viraemia, and in controlling HIV replication and maintaining clinical stability. We report here the detailed findings in two vertically infected children, from the Edinburgh perinatal cohort. Both were clinically stable for the first 7 years of life.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have sequenced the p17 coding regions of the gag gene from 211 patients infected either through injecting drug use (IDU) or by sexual intercourse between men from six cities in Scotland, N. England, N. Ireland, and the Republic of Ireland.
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