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2.10 Coinfections & viral load
2.11 Sanctuary sites
2.12 Viral load on & off treatment
Glossary
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compartment place in the body that has barriers limiting both HIV and HIV drugs from moving freely.
CSF cerebral spinal fluid – the fluid that circulates around the brain and spinal column.
resistance when the genetic structure of an organism changes in ways that stops a drug from working.
sanctuary site see compartment.
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We usually measure viral load in blood. Several other important places in the body have barriers that limit both HIV and HIV drugs from moving freely. These are called compartments or sanctuary sites. Viral load in these compartments can differ from viral load in your blood.
These compartments include the genital tract, the CSF (cerebral spinal fluid – the fluid that circulates around the brain and spinal column), and the brain itself.
This makes HIV a very complicated illness.
Current research suggests that the direction of infection is lymph
blood
compartments.
In practice, because blood is used for most tests, you are unlikely to know exactly what is going on in other compartments.
Reducing HIV in blood and lymph nodes seems to stop HIV related complications in other compartments (eg in the brain) even if HIV drugs don't penetrate these parts of the body.
This is a complex area of research because testing viral load accurately in compartments besides the blood is difficult.
Index
2.10 Coinfections & viral load
2.11 Sanctuary sites
2.12 Viral load on & off treatment
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Last updated on Monday 26th November 2007.