For over three decades, HIV has played an elaborate game of hide-and-seek with researchers, making treating—and possibly even curing—the disease a seemingly insurmountable obstacle to achieve.
It's very unlikely to get HIV from kissing. Here's how HIV can be transmitted and tips to prevent the spread.
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is a viral infection that attacks our immune systems. Infection enters the body by contact ...
Researchers at Western University and the University of Calgary have discovered how HIV hides in different parts of the body ...
The study reveals that HIV cloaks itself in the DNA of infected cells using unique DNA patterns in the brain, blood and parts ...
The landscape of HIV prevention has undergone a profound transformation with significant advancements in medical interventions and a deeper understanding of how the virus spreads. These developments ...
Once HIV infects a cell, the virus inserts its genetic information into the DNA, making the infection generally incurable.
In a recent landmark study, scientists have unveiled how HIV-1 penetrates the cell's nuclear barrier—a discovery that could reshape antiviral strategies. The research, led by Professor Peijun Zhang, ...
Called “bluetoothing,” the gruesome movement is fueling a wave of new HIV infections in hotspots around the globe, including ...
A generation has passed since the world saw the peak in AIDS-related deaths. Those deaths — agonizing, from diseases or infections the body might otherwise fight off — sent loved ones into the streets ...