Gel May Protect Women From HIV....

Angel

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Gel may protect women from getting HIV

WASHINGTON (AP) - Scientists have long sought a vaginal gel that women could apply before sex to block the AIDS virus. Now they've found a new lead - a chemical specially designed to thwart the way HIV penetrates women's cells.

The experimental drug isn't ready for human testing yet, but it provided potent protection to female monkeys exposed to large amounts of an AIDS virus, researchers report Thursday in the journal Science.

The chemical prevented HIV from invading vaginal tissue by blocking its preferred cellular doorway, the first evidence that targeting that portal is sufficient to prevent infection.

"There's such a need for prevention right now,'' said lead researcher Dr. Michael Lederman of Case Western Reserve University. ``Having a target in some ways could simplify approaches to prevention.''


AIDS specialists called the discovery a promising step in the quest for so-called topical microbicides, gels or creams that women could use to protect themselves without having to get a man to agree to a condom.


"There's been a lot of difficulty in getting microbicides to be both effective and non-irritating,'' said Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. "This is a step forward.''


HIV infection is rising more rapidly among women than men in many parts of the world. Half of all of the adults living with HIV and AIDS worldwide are female, compared with 41 percent in 1997, according to the Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS. In sub-Saharan Africa, for example, the figure is nearly 60 percent, the group says.


The microbicide hunt has proved difficult. The first product actually promoted for HIV protection, the spermicide nonoxynol-9, was ultimately found to increase the chance of infection because it irritated vaginal tissue.


Now, two experimental microbicides are undergoing final-stage testing in thousands of women in Africa. While advocates hope they'll provide at least partial protection, they don't specifically target the way HIV invades during heterosexual intercourse.


HIV invades cells through "receptor'' molecules on their surfaces; it prefers one called CCR5. Scientists have long known that people who lack CCR5 because of genetic mutations hardly ever get HIV - and that the body harbors another molecule called RANTES that can block HIV by sticking to CCR5 first.


Lederman partnered with Swiss researchers who created a manmade RANTES version thousands of times more potent at blocking CCR5. They gave 30 monkeys a hormone to make them more vulnerable to HIV infection. Then they sprayed their vaginas with the new chemical, called PSC-RANTES, and 15 minutes later squirted in high doses of a monkey-human strain of AIDS virus.


Monkeys who received the highest dose of PSC-RANTES were completely protected; a lower dose provided 80 percent protection. There were no detectable side effects.


PSC-RANTES costs a lot to manufacture, so the scientists are working on cheaper formulas, and on a gel version that could stay in the vagina longer. More safety studies in animals are needed, too. But ``if we're lucky,'' a CCR5-blocking molecule might begin small safety studies in women in a year, Lederman said.


It's crucial to develop multiple methods to block sexually transmitted HIV, said Dr. Zeda Rosenberg of the International Partnership for Microbicides. " Having a drug that specifically blocks HIV's receptors is a really important piece.''

http://channels.netscape.com/ns/new...ff/story/0001/20041014/1409916585.htm&sc=1500
 
Just a reminder, just because they may had found a way of protecting women from HIV don't mean you should have sex with as many men as you can.

I don't want to give teen girls the wrong idea. But it's a good thing that they found this, but I don't know if a lot of women will use it.
 
There's a reason for this, maybe ..just maybe there are just too many teenagers out there who are getting HIV from having too much sex, and thought of finding something like this would help by protecting them from HIV...

There's always a reason why they did what they had to do in order to save lives....
 
:werd: People often abuse these things. Nothing is 100% effective. I've seen women go fucking around with many men cuz they know they are on birth control. Suddenly, the get pregnant... oops!
 
not only women but men too Vampy!....I would say 50% both....It takes two to tango! LOL
 
Generally it's a great achievement whenever there is hope in a certain medical discovery which could enable the prevention of HIV...look at it from this view, HIV may be a long ways off from finding a cure for it...meanwhile, with this new developement and prevention...it'll go a long ways combating this deadly HIV disease that has taken many, many lives...even though, it is taught to teach abstinence yet often and perhaps sadly, teens, or for that matter, anyone, do practice 'sex' without the aid of condoms, etc., then women will surely can benefit from using this 'gel' in the prevention of HIV.... ;)
 
It just seems like another way to boost women's confidence to have sex with HIV men just because of a gel. Don't forget there are dumb people who don't really know what they are getting into.

I think that this should be given to couples who are married and found out too late that one of them had it from previous relationship but not cheating.

I think it's a bad idea, and I think they need to focus on getting information through teens to get checked out before having sex with someone and especially getting through parents to talk to their kids about sex.

I saw a show about this and there are so many controversies. It seems like parents who talk about sex very early and so on through adulthood, they seem more responsible about sex especially those who talk about abstinence. Parents are uncomfortable to approach this, so why not require them to take classes at their child's school to talk about this? Somebody needs to help parents, that's why we need everybody.

There might be a reason, but they are more concerned in preventing a disease, but not teaching them the consequences of STD's, sex and everything that comes with it, including moral teaching whom and when it's okay to have sex.
 
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