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Can AIDS be cured with medicine?
What is HIV treatment? HIV treatment involves taking medicine that reduces the amount of HIV in your body. HIV medicine is called antiretroviral therapy (ART). There is no effective cure for HIV.
Is there a 100\% cure for AIDS?
There is no cure for HIV, although antiretroviral treatment can control the virus, meaning that people with HIV can live long and healthy lives. Most research is looking for a functional cure where HIV is permanently reduced to undetectable and harmless levels in the body, but some residual virus may remain.
Is there a pill for AIDS?
PrEP, or pre-exposure prophylaxis, is medicine people at risk for HIV take to prevent getting HIV from sex or injection drug use. PrEP can stop HIV from taking hold and spreading throughout your body. Currently, there are only two FDA-approved daily oral medications for PrEP.
How to cure AIDS naturally?
Healthy Fruit And Fresh Vegetables. Eating healthy fruits and vegetables aids in providing proper nutrition to the body which is very much required to fight against the disease.
How long does it take for HIV to progress to AIDS?
Generally speaking, the time it takes to go from HIV infection to AIDS is around 5-10 years if no medical intervention is made. Differences in time can be due to any number of factors, including: The genetic strain of HIV a person has been infected with (some of which may be more or less virulent than others)
When to start HIV treatment?
Evidence from studies shows that starting treatment early after HIV infection (ideally when the immune system is still strong) is most effective at protecting the health of people with HIV, and it helps protect partners from becoming infected. So, treatment should be started as early as possible after HIV is diagnosed.
Who has been cured of HIV?
Timothy Ray Brown, aka the “Berlin patient,” the only person to be cured of HIV, may finally have company. A decade after Brown became famous thanks to a stem cell transplant that eliminated his HIV infection, a similar transplant from a donor who has HIV-resistant cells appears to have cured another man, dubbed the “London patient.”