论文部分内容阅读
发表在8月9日出版的《柳叶刀》上的一项由美、英、泰三国研究人员共同进行的研究证实,只出现在亚洲、经由昆虫传染的恙虫病,可将爱滋病患者体内的HIV抑制甚至测不出来的程度。据报告,泰国清迈省和迈红桑省的十名患恙虫病的爱滋病患者,有四人血液中的HIV大幅降低。这与爱滋病患者感染其他疾病的结果正好相反,感染任何其他病症者皆未显示出HIV病毒减少的效果。15名参与研究的爱滋病人中,10人患恙虫病、4人感染疟疾、一人感染螺旋体病。研究显示,感染疟疾和细螺旋体病的5名患者,HIV并未减少。参与研究的病人只接受恙虫病的治疗,并未服用其他任何抗爱滋病药物。不过泰国公共卫生部传染疾病管制署署
A study jointly conducted by researchers from the United States, Britain and Thailand published in the Lancet on August 9th found that tsutsugamushi disease, which occurs only in Asia and is transmitted by insects, can turn HIV Suppress or undetectable extent. It is reported that HIV in the blood of ten people with scrub typhus in Thailand’s Chiang Mai province and Maihongsang province has been significantly reduced. This is the opposite of what happens to other people living with HIV, and none of those who have contracted any of the other conditions shows a reduction in HIV. Fifteen of the 15 AIDS patients studied included tsutsugamushi disease, four people were infected with malaria and one was infected with spirochete. Studies have shown that in 5 patients infected with malaria and leptospirosis, HIV did not decrease. Patients participating in the study only treated tsutsugamushi disease, did not take any other anti-AIDS drugs. However, the Thai Ministry of Public Health transmits the Disease Control Agency