Scientists find that monkey HIV can fight drugs within days of entering the body

  The latest research shows that the monkey version of HIV has the ability to escape the attack of anti-AIDS drugs within a few days after entering the human body. This discovery has had a major impact on AIDS treatment research.

  According to the latest research report, if humans are also infected with HIV, the infected person must be treated "very early."

  Not long ago, the medical community announced that Mississippi Baby, an American girl, started taking retroviral drugs 30 hours after she was born. After 18 months of continuous treatment, she was originally "cured" and was discovered in July this year. She has AIDS. The virus is resurrected again.

  reported that an important challenge in curing AIDS is that HIV has a hiding place, an infected immune cell. HIV DNA can exist in infected immune cells for many years, thus avoiding interference from antiretroviral drugs and the immune system.

  For most patients, once the medication is stopped, the virus will begin to replicate. In other words, the patient must take herbal medicine for life. Not clear so far

  When and how HIV found these hidden cells when it invaded the human body.

  A new study found that rhesus monkeys infected with simian immunodeficiency virus (simianHIV) had cells that hide the virus in the body "unexpectedly early" after infection.

  These monkeys were treated 3, 7, 10, and 14 days after infection, but as soon as the drug was stopped, the virus began to replicate, while the previously treated monkeys had virus replication.