Thursday, 14 June 2012

HIV might have returned in ‘cured’ patient: scientists

<p>An American male whose <span>HIV</span> seemed to disappear after a blood pith transplant for leukemia might be display new hints of a disease, sparking discuss over either a heal was unequivocally achieved.</p>
<p>Scientists remonstrate over a latest commentary on <span>Timothy Brown</span>, also famous as a “Berlin patient,” presented during a discussion in Spain final week, according to a news in a biography Science’s ScienceInsider blog.</p>
<p>Brown was given bone pith transplants in 2006 that seemed to exterminate a tellurian immunodeficiency pathogen from his body, heading his doctors to announce a “cure of HIV has been achieved” in a peer-reviewed biography Blood in 2010.</p>
<p>The transplants came from a donor with an surprising genetic turn that is naturally resistant to HIV. About one in 100 Caucasian people have this turn that prevents a proton CCR5 from appearing on a dungeon surface.</p>
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