Super AIDS hits New York

Flower

New member
Vicious new AIDS strain

World's first case of drug-resistant strain found here

BY FRANK LOMBARDI
DAILY NEWS CITY HALL BUREAU


City Health Commissioner Thomas Frieden uses charts yesterday to explain devastating impact of newly discovered HIV superstrain that can evolve into full-blown AIDS in only two months.

What you need to know
A previously unknown superstrain of the virus that causes AIDS has been diagnosed in the city, sparking fears among health officials and the gay community.

So far only one case has been found in the world - a New York man in his mid-40s who had unprotected sex with multiple men in October.

City and federal experts believe it's the first time this mutated strain of HIV has been reported anywhere.

It is virtually drug-resistant and progresses in a matter of months from HIV infection to full-blown AIDS, a process that normally takes 10 or more years. In this man's case it took only two months.

"I've been living with HIV since 1981, and I was dreading this day, because I knew this day would come when multidrug-resistant strains of the virus would begin to enter into the community," said Dennis de Leon, president of the Latino Commission on AIDS.

The virus is known technically as a strain of three-class antiretroviral-resistant HIV, or 3-DCR HIV. Simply put, that means it's resistant to three of the four classes of drugs used to treat HIV.

Usually a cocktail of drugs from the four classes is needed to keep the virus in check.

Those most vulnerable to the virus would be gays and intravenous drug users who share needles. But it could easily spread to the heterosexual community.

"Potentially, no one is immune," city Health Commissioner Thomas Frieden said.

The new superstrain virus can turn into AIDS in two to 20 months, Frieden said.

The man diagnosed with the virus, who is not being identified by officials, has AIDS and his prognosis is bleak.

An intense investigation is underway to located his sex partners to track the source of the virus and stem its possible spread.

The infected man had repeatedly tested negative for HIV over the past decade, including as late as May 2003.

Last October he was involved in "multiple episodes with multiple partners" of unprotected sex while binging on crystal methamphetamine, a popular party drug known as the poor man's cocaine, Frieden said.

In December the man developed flulike symptoms and his doctor diagnosed HIV. Further tests by the Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Center in Manhattan turned up the superstrain virus.

Jay Dobkin, medical director of the AIDS Center at Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center, said:

"Many of us here remember the dark days before there was any effective treatment for HIV, and I think ... [this] should at least be a reminder that those days could come back."

Frieden and a battery of local HIV/AIDS experts said the best way for people to combat the new strain is to practice safe sex and be tested regularly for HIV. Anti-retroviral medications have helped to sharply reduce the number of deaths in the city related to HIV. At the peak of the AIDS epidemic there were 7,102 deaths in the city in 1994, compared with 1,656 in 2003.

Advocates for the gay community said this is a wakeup call about the complacency created by breakthrough treatments.

"It debunks that sense of false comfort we were resting on," said Ana Oliveira, executive director of Gay Men's Health Crisis.

There are more than 88,000 New Yorkers who know they have HIV, the city Health Department says, and it's estimated another 20,000 have it and don't know it because they haven't been tested.



What you need to know


How is this new strain different from previously known strains of HIV?

The time between infection and developing full-blown AIDS appears to be two to three months, as opposed to years. The new strain is also resistant to three of the four types of drugs currently used to treat HIV/AIDS.

Can it be treated?

No. Because this strain is multi-drug resistant, the relatively effective "cocktail" treatment of drugs cannot be used.

How many people have been diagnosed with the new strain?

So far, only one - a gay man in his mid-40s.

Who is at risk?

Anyone who has unprotected sex, especially unprotected anal sex, which increases the odds of transmitting all types of sexually transmitted diseases.

Could this be the start of a new epidemic?

Yes. But it also could be an isolated incident.

Originally published on February 11, 2005


:(
 

Flower

New member
EEK! This is scary!

'This may be the tip of the iceberg'



By PAUL H.B. SHIN
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

The threat that an entirely new AIDS epidemic might ravage the country sent shock waves through the medical community yesterday.
The discovery of a virulent new strain of HIV that is resistant to three of the four types of drugs used to fight the virus means that all the recent advances in treatment may go from cutting edge to obsolete overnight, experts feared.

"This is just scary. This just throws out the medicine chest," said Dr. Charles Gonzalez, an AIDS specialist at NYU Medical Center and Bellevue Hospital.

Modern treatments rely on a cocktail of two to three types of drugs known as anti-retrovirals that combat HIV. But because three of the four types of drugs are ineffective against the new mutant strain, options are bleak for the patient, identified as a man in his 40s.

"In the beginning of the AIDS crisis, we had no treatment. Again, we have absolutely no treatment," said Gonzalez, a member of a network that monitors new AIDS cases in New York. "Everything we're using now to treat this guy is jury-rigged."

Drug-resistant HIV isn't new. But what makes this new bug unique is that it is resistant to 19 of the 20 drugs now on the market. And that the time between infection and developing full-blown AIDS appears to be a mere two to three months, city Health Commissioner Thomas Frieden said.

Normally, it takes about nine years for an untreated person with HIV to develop AIDS, with death following within 18 months, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The team at the Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Center in Manhattan that tested the virus found "extensive" mutations, leading them to believe it is a new strain, a spokesman for the center said.

Dr. David Ho, director of the center, called the new virus "alarming" and urged close monitoring for additional cases.

The CDC has alerted health officials nationwide, said Dr. Ron Valdiserri, deputy director of the National Center for HIV, Sexually Transmitted Diseases and Tuberculosis Prevention.

"We are talking about a very unusual strain here," Valdiserri said. "This is still a very, very serious and fatal disease."

Doctors said they are now holding their breath to see if other cases appear.

"This may be the tip of the iceberg. It's going to get ugly," Gonzalez said. "If this one starts getting around, we're back to the early '80s."

Originally published on February 12, 2005
 

wild ricky

New member
Jan 22, 2005
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Not to imply that the other strains were really "treatable" in the long term, but this new strain appears to be really virulent. Enough to scare one out of anything other than sex in a comitted relationship??
 

Berlin

New member
Jan 31, 2003
11,411
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Flower said:
By PAUL H.B. SHIN
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

"This may be the tip of the iceberg. It's going to get ugly," Gonzalez said. "If this one starts getting around, we're back to the early '80s."

Originally published on February 12, 2005
Horrible ...

Hobby safe ,guys.
 

Annessa

Banned
Jul 30, 2003
972
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This is such shocking, scary and very saddened news.


So I leave these questions open.... Are all the Bareback, BBBJ, BBBJTC, etc. that gentlemen want and some escorts provide worth the risks now?

Were they worth the same risks before this new shocking medical news came out?


I don't judge, for I'm not the one that we all have to answer to when 'judgement day' comes. I question people's logic.
So, NO ONE get the wrong idea, I am not bashing or slamming those that do. I'm just looking for some honest insight/feedback.





Annessa
xoxo
 

Annessa

Banned
Jul 30, 2003
972
0
0
wild ricky said:
Not to imply that the other strains were really "treatable" in the long term, but this new strain appears to be really virulent. Enough to scare one out of anything other than sex in a comitted relationship??
There is nothing wrong with having sex when you are not in a committed relationship, as long as you ALWAYS use protection. ;)





Annessa
xoxo
 

UMustang

Member
Jan 16, 2004
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Read about this in the NYTimes, and, as scary as the story sounds, you have to put it in perspective.
- this is only one case
- the time frame is from when he went to his doctor to get tested to the time he developed AIDS (in which case the time frame from HIV to AIDS could have been much longer)

There are other drug-resistant strains of HIV/AIDS, but most are only resistant to one or two of the four drug classes, as opposed to the three classes that this one is. However, since this is only one case, who's to know if this is isolated to this one person (could be his own immunity) or if this is a sign of trouble to come.

All that being said, it's best to cover up and be safe
 

Jade4u

It's been good to know ya
That is scary, but everyone should stay aware of the risks and play as safely as they can. Maybe and I say maybe one day they will find a cure for aids, but there are always other risks out there as well and always be new diseases forming as well.
 

phelan

On a Plane...
Dec 25, 2004
440
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Around the Globe
Has anyone verified this in some canadian newspapers? As i'm just wondering if it's a hoax, if it is it's a pretty damn awful one.

Hobby safe ppl and use your brains
 

Asterix

Sr. Member
Aug 6, 2002
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Not a hoax, the story is being carried by the main news services, and the New York health officials seemed to have checked their information out pretty thoroughly before releasing the story. For some reason Dr. Robert Gallo, co-discoverer of HIV, was dismissive, saying he thought it would most likley amount to "much ado about nothing". He seems alone however, most experts in the field I've read quotes from are very concerned. What they don't say is whether the new strain in addition to being more aggressive once contracted, is also more contagious than older strains or not.
 

Hard Idle

Active member
Jan 15, 2005
4,959
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North York
Only one case?

Somebody probably gave it to him. And of the druggies he partied with, at least a few may have gotten it at the same time. Care to guess how many people they've been with since?
 

maxim4

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Aug 22, 2001
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Toronto
well...............!

The public health commisioner of NYC held a press conference on this very topic.
The facts are as follows:

1-The 'new' AIDS strain is resistant to multi doses of viral drugs.
2-Cases have only been found in North America in the BRONX, NY and in New Jersey.
3- BiSexual men and Gay Men have been the ONLY carriers of this new AIDS strain.
4-Black american and Latino american Bi sexual/gay men have been the identified most at risk!

The truth is that in the USA 1 in 10 people have or have had an STD and that statistic is for those who have bothered to check their health status!
 

Asterix

Sr. Member
Aug 6, 2002
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Predicted to happen at least six years ago by AIDS organizations. An almost inevitable result when treating fast mutating viruses with drugs that fall short of eradicating them or keeping them in check. Whatever doesn't kill them makes them stronger. Careful out there people.

http://www.aegis.com/news/ads/1998/ad981232.html
 
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Asterix

Sr. Member
Aug 6, 2002
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Works now.
 
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