РефератыИностранный языкUnUntitled Essay Research Paper The AIDS virus

Untitled Essay Research Paper The AIDS virus

Untitled Essay, Research Paper


The AIDS virus is one of the most deadly and most wide spread diseases in


the modern era. The disease was first found in 1981 as doctors around the


United States began to report groups of young, homosexual men developing


a rare pneumonia caused by an organism called Penumocystis carini. These


patients then went on to develop many other new and rare complications that


had previously been seen only in patients with severely damaged immune systems.


The Center for Disease Control in the United States named this new epidemic


the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome and defined it by a specific set of


symptoms. In 1983, researchers finally identified the virus that caused AIDS.


They named the virus the human immunodeficiency virus, or HIV. AIDS causes


the immune system of the infected patient to become much less efficient until


it stops working altogether. The first drug that was approved


by the American Food and Drug administration for use in treating the AIDS


virus is called AZT, which stands for azido-thymidine. AZT was released under


the brand name of Retrovir and it’s chemical name is Zidovudine, or ZDV.


The structural name of AZT is 3′-azido-3′- deoxythymidine. AZT works by


inhibiting the process of copying DNA in cells. More specifically, AZT, inhibits


the reverse transcriptase enzyme, which is involved in the DNA replication


process. When DNA is replicating in a cell, there is a specific enzyme that


works along one side of the original DNA strand as the DNA is split into


two strands, copying each individual nucleotide. This enzyme is only able


to work in one direction along the nucleotide string, therefore a different


enzyme, or rather a series of different enzymes is required to work in the


opposite direction. Reverse transcriptase is one of the enzymes that is required


to work in the opposite direction. AZT works by bonding to the reverse


transcriptase enzyme, thereby making it unable to bond with the nucleotide


string and making it unable to fulfill it’s role. This whole process is used


by the HIV virus to replicate itself so that it can continue to infect more


cells. AZT was originally developed over 20 years ago


for the treatment of lukemia. The concept behind this was that the AZT was


supposed to terminate the DNA synthesis in the growing lukemia lymphocytes,


thereby stopping the disease. AZT was rejected at this point because it failed


to lengthen the lives of test animals. The problem with


the AZT drug is that it is not perfect. First of all, AZT will not bond to


each and every reverse transcriptase enzyme in the body, and therefore it


cannot shut down the HIV production completely. The reason for this is because


to put enough AZT in the patient to completely shut down the HIV production


would probably kill the patient. The second, and most serious problem with


AZT is that it also goes into normal, healthy cells and will inhibit their


reverse transcriptase enzyme and will therefore inhibit their ability to


produce new, healthy cells. However, AZT does have an ability to specifically


target HIV infected cells to a certain degree so that it does not kill each


and every cell it gets into. However, it does kill a high proportion of the


cells that it gets into, thereby giving it a high toxicity level.


The formula for AZT is C H N O . The molar mass of AZT


is 267.24 grams per mole. AZT’s melting point is between 106 C and 112 C.


AZT is soluble in water, which is important so that it may dissolve into


the human blood and be distributed to the cells. AZT is usually taken in


a pill format, but it is absorbed by the skin, which can make it dangerous


for people handling the drug. There is quite a bit of


controversy about the effectiveness of AZT. Most experts agree that AZT delays


the progression of HIV disease; the drug may also prolong the disease-free


survival period. However, many doctors still disagree with using AZT as a


treatment for AIDS. Peter Duesberg, a professor of molecular biology at the


university of California, Berkley, says that “In view of this, [the cytotoxicity


level of AZT] there is no rational explanation of how AZT could be beneficial


to AIDS patients, even if HIV were proven to cause AIDS.” This comment stems


from the fact that AZT has a very high cytotoxicity level, which means that


while it kills the infected cells, it will also kill perfectly healthy cells.


According to Dr. Duesberg, AZT will kill approximately nine hundred and ninety


nine healthy cells for each infected cell that it kills. Most of this opposition


to AZT stems from the fact that the initial testing for the drug had severe


problems associated with it. These initial tests were performed with two


groups of AI

DS patients. The volunteering patients were secretly divided


into two groups using a double-blind system, where neither the patients nor


the doctors are aware of who is in the placebo, or control group, and who


is in the AZT group. These tests were performed by the FDA at twelve medical


centers throughout the United States. The study actually became unblinded


almost immediately as some patients discovered a difference in taste between


the placebo and AZT caplets and other patients took the capsules to chemists


to have them analyzed. The doctors found out the differences between AZT


patients and the placebo patients by very obvious differences in blood profiles.


An FDA meeting was convened and the decision was made to keep all of the


useless data, and therefore the bad data was thrown in with the good data


and it ended up making all of the data virtually useless. In fact, according


to some sources, AZT ended up shortening the lifespans of many of the patients


taking it. AZT is also thought to be a possible carcinogen, although it has


not been around long enough for any conclusive results to be obtained. After


AZT was approved for use, mortality statistics were taken, they showed a


mortality rate of 10% after 17 weeks, with the original number of patients


being 4805. The FDA tests, with their skewed statistics, showed only a 1%


mortality rate. AZT also had some strange side-effects that were reported


with it’s use, such as raising the IQs of 21 children who took the drug by


15 points, 5 of the children died. The newest treatments


with AZT are combining AZT with other drugs, such as ddI. These tests were


being performed, once again in the double-blind format, just like the original


FDA tests. Three different groups were tested, ones taking only AZT, ones


taking only ddI and ones taking a combination of both ddI and AZT. The Data


Safety Monitoring Board (DSMB), and organization that monitors all testing


in the United States secretly unblinded the test, as they do with all


double-blind tests, and found that the AZT patients had a much higher mortality


rate than those in the straight ddI and the ddI and AZT tests. The DSMB found


the difference in the tests to be high enough to stop the trials early.


In August of 1994, the FDA approved AZT for use by pregnant,


AIDS infected women. Once again it was conducted in a double-blind method


and was placebo controlled. The therapy was begun 14-34 weeks after pregnancy.


However, in this testing it was found that in the AZT mothers, the AIDS


transmission rate to the babies was about 8.3% while the placebo group was


about 25.5%. Therefore the AZT was reducing the AIDS transmission by two


thirds. It is still not clear as to the effectiveness


of AZT to stop or hinder the progress of the AIDS virus. Most experts today


consider AZT to be a valid way to treat AIDS and HIV infection, but they


are constantly experimenting with new combinations of different drugs such


as ddI and AZT to try to better treat AIDS patients. The massive administrative


errors in the initial testing have set the AZT research back and have fostered


unlooked for antipathy. As the treatments become more sound and more reliable,


AZT will find it’s place in AIDS treatments. EndNotes Lauritsen, John. Poison


by Prescription – The AZT Story. New York; Asklepios


Publishing, 1990. pg.7. Lauritsen, John. Poison by Prescription – The AZT


Story. New York; Asklepios Publishing, 1990. pg.7.


Lauritsen, John. Poison by Prescription – The AZT Story. New York; Asklepios


Publishing, 1990. pg.23. Lauritsen, John. Poison


by Prescription – The AZT Story. New York; Asklepios


Publishing, 1990. pg.49. Whitmore, Arthur. AZT Approved for Preventing


Maternal-Fetal HIV Transmission. Internet:


http://www.hivpositive.com/f-DrugAdvisories/II- FDA/4.htm.


August 8, 1994. Bibliography Lauritsen, John. Poison by Prescription – The


AZT Story. New York: Asklepios Publishing, 1990.


Pinsky, Laura. Douglas, Paul Harding. Metroka, Craig. The Essential HIV Treatment


Fact Book. New York: Simon & Schuster Inc.,


1992. Kaiser, Jon D. Immune Power – A Comprehensive Treatment Program for


HIV. New York: St.Martin’s Press, 1993. Whitmore,


Arthur. AZT Approved For Preventing Maternal-Fetal HIV Transmission.


Internet:


http://www.hivpositive.com/f-DrugAdvisories/II-FDA/4.htm, August


8, 1994. Whitmore, Arthur. FDA Grants Accelerated


Approval For 3TC With AZT To Treat AIDS. Internet:


http://www.hivpositive.com/f-DrugAdvisories/II-FDA/17.htm,


November 20, 1995. Clark, Martina. AZT: Pediatric


Study Changed. Internet:


http://www.out.org/HIV/AZT_pediatric_study_changed.htm, “W.O.R.L.D. -


A Newsletter about Women & HIV” April 22, 1995.

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