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Tests

Information about diagnostic tests, including HIV antibody tests, CD4 and viral loadA measurement of the quantity of HIV RNA in the blood. Viral load blood test results are expressed as the number of copies (of HIV) per milliliter of blood plasma. tests, as well as other diagnostic procedures applying to people with HIV.

Genotype tests get final Budget approval

Positive Living article • Adrian Ogier • 26 May 2011

Good news from this year’s Budget is the decision to list the HIV genotype test as a funded Medicare item.

Approval of the test, which measures drug resistanceHIV which has mutated and is less susceptible to the effects of one or more anti-HIV drugs is said to be resistantHIV which has mutated and is less susceptible to the effects of one or more anti-HIV drugs is said to be resistant.., has been promoted long and hard by both community and clinicalPertaining to or founded on observation and treatment of participants, as distinguished from theoretical or basic science. groups as a vital tool in Australia’s HIV treatment arsenal. read more »

What's Your Problem?

Positive Living article • Dr Louise Owen • 11 June 2010

Doctor Louise answers readers' questions. In this issue she discusses blood tests and gastric reflux. read more »

Healthy T-cells help keep cancers at bay

Positive Living article • www.aidsmap.org • 4 December 2009
symptoms, illnesses and opportunistic infections

Maintaining a CD4 cell count above 500 helps protect you from a range of AIDS-defining and non-AIDS-defining cancers, French investigators report.

Researchers followed over 50,000 positive people between 1998 and 2006 and found that the seven* most common cancers were found least in those whose counts stayed consistently above 500. read more »

Aussie eye scanner detects HIV

Positive Living article • 20 August 2009

A WA-developed eye scanner that can detect HIV could become a major screening tool in resourcepoor countries.

The Lions Eye Institute director of the Centre for e-Medicine, Yogesan Kanagasingam, is working with international colleagues to isolate a distinctive pattern of changes in eye tissue, including the blood vessels in the retina, that occur in people with HIV. read more »

Treatments news from the IAS Conference

Positive Living article • 20 August 2009
pregnancy and childbirth

A roundup of HIV treatments developments from the IAS Conference in Cape Town. read more »

Resistance

From HIV Tests and Treatments • 7 August 2009

Every time HIV reproduces itself there’s a high chance that it may ‘mutate’ slightly. A ‘mutation’ is a small alteration in the genetic makeup. These alterations may make the virusA small infective organism which is incapable of reproducing outside a host cell. more resistantHIV which has mutated and is less susceptible to the effects of one or more anti-HIV drugs is said to be resistant. to an individual drug or potentially a class of drug.The more the virus is reproducing (i.e. the higher the viral loadA measurement of the quantity of HIV RNA in the blood. Viral load blood test results are expressed as the number of copies (of HIV) per milliliter of blood plasma.) the more chances there are of mutations occurring. read more »

Treatment news from CROI

Positive Living article • John Daye • 13 March 2009

John Daye reports on treatments developments from the 16th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI) in Montréal, Canada. read more »

CD4 (T-cell) counts

From Treat Yourself Right • 5 January 2009

This is a blood test, which can tell how many CD4 cells (also called T- cells) you have. A person with a healthy immune system can have between 500 and over a thousand of these important white blood cells per millilitre of blood. read more »

Viral load tests

From Treat Yourself Right • 5 January 2009

HIV multiplies – by ‘copying’ itself – within your body. Viral loadA measurement of the quantity of HIV RNA in the blood. Viral load blood test results are expressed as the number of copies (of HIV) per milliliter of blood plasma. refers to the amount of HIV in your blood at any given time. You can also measure viral load in other body fluids like vaginal fluids, but this is only available in a research setting. Routine viral load tests look at how much virusA small infective organism which is incapable of reproducing outside a host cell. is in your blood. read more »

Looking after your health: Viral load and CD4 count

From Next steps • 1 December 2008

People with HIV can benefit from regular tests designed to monitor how their immune system is coping. read more »

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HIV Clinical Trials update