HIV Replication 3D Medical Animation

Posted By Admin
Categorized Under: Videos
Comments (0)

It is a very excellent animation which explains the hiv replication very clearly. For free download of this video please visit my webpage http://rufusrajadurai.wetpaint.com/ And other 3D animation videos visit http://rufusrajadurai.wetpaint.com/page/3D+Medical+Animation+Library Regards, Dr.Rufus The Lyrics of this video is here Targeting HIV replication The replication of HIV 1 is a multi-stage process. Each step is crucial to successful replication and is therefore a potential target of antiretroviral drugs. Step one is the infection of a suitable host-cell, such as a CD4-positive T-lymphocyte. Entry of HIV into the cell requires the presence of certain receptors on the cell surface, CD4 -- receptors and co-receptors such as CCR5 or CXCR4. These receptors interact with protein-complexes, which are embedded in the viral envelope. These complexes are composed of two glycoproteins: an extracellular gp 120 and a transmembrane gp 41 When HIV approaches the target cell gp120 binds to the CD4-receptors. This process is termed attachment. It promotes further binding to a co-receptor. Co-receptor binding results in a conformational change in gp120. This allows gp41 to unfold and insert its hydrophobic terminus into the cell membrane. Gp 41 then folds back on itself. This draws the virus towards the cell and facilitates the fusion of their membranes. The viral nucleocapsid enters the host cell and breaks open releasing two viral RNA-strands and 3 essential replication enzymes: Integrase, Protease and Reverse Transcriptase. Reverse Transcriptase begins the reverse transcription of viral RNA. It has two catalytic domains: The Ribonuclease-H active site And the polymerase active site Here single stranded viral RNA is transcribed into an RNA-DNA double helix. Ribonuclease- H breaks down the RNA. The polymerase then completes the remaining DNA-strand to form a DNA -- double helix. Now Integrase goes into action. It cleaves a dinucleotide from each 3-prime end of the DNA creating two sticky ends. Integrase then transfers the DNA into the cell nucleus and facilitates its integration into the host cell genome. The host cell genome now contains the genetic information of HIV. Activation of the cell induces transcription of proviral DNA into messenger RNA. The viral messenger RNA migrates into the cytoplasm where building blocks for a new virus are synthesised. Some of them have to be processed by the viral protease. Protease cleaves longer proteins into smaller core proteins. This step is crucial to create an infectious virus. Two viral RNA-strands and the replication enzymes then come together and core proteins assemble around them forming the capsid. This immature particle leaves the cell acquiring a new envelope of host and viral proteins. The virus matures and becomes ready to infect other cells. HIV replicates billions of times per day destroying the hosts` immune cells and eventually causing disease progression. Drugs which interfere with the key steps of viral replication can stop this fatal process. Entry into the host cell can be blocked by fusion inhibitors for example. Inhibition of reverse transcriptase by nucleoside inhibitors or by non-nucleoside Reverse Transcriptase- inhibitors is part of standard antiretroviral regimens. The action of Integrase can be blocked. Protease inhibitors are also part of standard antiretroviral therapy. Each blocked step in viral replication is a step towards better control of HIV disease. Script, Storyboard, Art Direction by: Frank Schauder, MD Animation: MACKEVISION Publicity: Dr.Rufus Rajadurai.MD.,D.DENS.,

Did I Just Contract HIV? Symptoms of Primary HIV Infection

Posted By Admin
Categorized Under: Videos
Comments (0)

It's sometimes possible to recognize when you've recently contracted HIV from signs and symptoms such as fever, rash, or swollen lymph nodes. This video will teach you how to recognize signs and symptoms of primary HIV infection that are experienced by between 40 and 90% of individuals after they are first infected with HIV. Primary HIV infection occurs during the first few weeks or months after a person first becomes infected with HIV. Symptoms include rash and/or fevers, possibly in combination with one or more of the following symptoms: malaise (which is a general feeling of weakness, discomfort, and fatigue), loss of appetite, weight loss, a sore throat, sores in the mouth, joint or muscle pain, swollen lymph nodes, diarrhea, fatigue, night sweats, nausea and vomiting, headache, or genital sores. The symptoms usually last from seven to ten days, and rarely more than two weeks. There is an incubation period of a few days to a few weeks between when the person was exposed to HIV and when the symptoms begin. If you have any of these symptoms and think there's even the slightest chance you might have been exposed to HIV, such as through recent sexual activity or sharing a needle, even with someone who you believe is HIV negative, you should see a doctor and ask to be tested for HIV. When you go to the doctor with any of these symptoms, it's very important to mention any risk factors you may have for HIV so they could test you. If you have ever had unprotected sex, even once, have used injection drugs, or think you might be experiencing primary HIV infection, make sure to tell your doctor. Visit http://www.GlobalLifeworks.org and http://AIDSvideos.org to learn more. [Do you want to help prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS? Are you fluent in a language other than English? Then volunteer to translate this video into another language! Click http://AIDSvideos.org/translate.shtml to to learn how you can help!!!]

When HIV Becomes AIDS (HIV 2)

Posted By Admin
Categorized Under: Videos
Comments (0)

HIV and AIDS are not the same thing, but the virus can lead to the disease. Learn how in this video. See more videos on HIV & AIDS: http://www.sexhealthguru.com/index.php?hiv_and_aids-1&YT214AIDS2

Possible HIV Cure?

Posted By Admin
Categorized Under: Videos
Comments (0)

Two doctors in Houston, Texas, believe they might have discovered the Achilles heel of the HIV virus. KHOU's Lee McGuire reports.

HIV 101

Posted By Admin
Categorized Under: Videos
Comments (0)

Basic info on HIV and AIDS.

HIV LIFECYCLE

Posted By Admin
Categorized Under: Videos
Comments (0)

For its exhibit at the 2002 International AIDS Conference in Barcelona,GlaxoSmithKline commissioned a three minute film on the life of cycle of the HIV virus,with an emphasis on the mechanism of the integrase molecule in its role in inserting the AIDS virus genome into the host T-cell DNA.

Introduction to HIV/AIDS: What You Need to Know

Posted By Admin
Categorized Under: Videos
Comments (0)

Becky Kuhn, M.D., co-founder of Global Lifeworks, covers critical basic information about HIV and AIDS. HIV is a virus that causes the disease AIDS, which can be fatal. There are treatments but no cure. HIV is spread by contact between body fluids (blood, semen, vaginal fluids, and breast milk) and mucous membranes (eyes, nose, mouth, and genitals). It is spread by sexual contact, injection drugs users sharing needles, from mother to child during childbirth or nursing, and (early on during the epidemic) by receiving blood transfusions. You can reduce your risk by abstaining from sex before marriage, being faithful to a single partner and using a condom and/or dental dam if you are sexually active, and by never injecting drugs or by never sharing needles if you do. It can take up to six months after exposure to HIV for a person to test HIV positive; even before they test HIV postive, the infected person can spread the disease to others. A doctor can prescribe antiretroviral (ARV) drugs to prevent HIV from progressing to clinical AIDS. It is critical to take every ARV dose on schedule to avoid developing a resistant strain of HIV. If a person is HIV positive, they still need to practice safer sex to avoid spreading HIV to others and to avoid contracting a different, resistant strain of HIV. This video refutes misinformation from the "Lee Evans HIV Tests" video. Visit http://www.AIDSvideos.org to learn more about Dr. Kuhn's outreach. Visit http://www.GlobalLifeworks.org and http://AIDSvideos.org to learn more. [Do you want to help prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS? Are you fluent in a language other than English? Then volunteer to translate this video into another language! Click http://AIDSvideos.org/translate.shtml to learn how you can help!!!]

HIV-Immune Cells

Posted By Admin
Categorized Under: Videos
Comments (0)

Doctors are considering using a new technology for genetically modifying AIDS patients' own cells to be resistant to HIV. As this ScienCentral News video explains, they're modeling the idea after rare individuals who are naturally immune to the AIDS virus.

Bayer Exposed ( HIV Contaminated Vaccine )

Posted By Admin
Categorized Under: Videos
Comments (0)

http://www.whale.to/vaccines.html [Video] Bayer Sells AIDS-Infected Drug Banned in U.S. in Europe, Asia - Unearthed documents show that the drug company Bayer sold millions of dollars worth of an injectable blood-clotting medicine -- Factor VIII concentrate, intended for hemophiliacs -- to Asian, Latin American, and some European countries in the mid-1980s, although they knew that it was tainted with AIDS. Bayer knew about the fact that the drug was tainted and told the FDA to keep things under wraps while they made a profit off of a drug that infected its patients. If these allegations are true, then both Bayer and the FDA are at fault for this catastrophe. FDA regulators helped to keep the continued sales hidden, asking the company that the problem be ''quietly solved without alerting the Congress, the medical community and the public,'' according to the minutes of a 1985 meeting octomedia Vaccine Information and Awareness sites: http://thinktwice.com/ http://www.vaclib.org/

German man possbily cured of HIV

Posted By Admin
Categorized Under: Videos
Comments (0)

A german man has been cured of HIV after he had a bone marrow transplant which was to treat his leukemia

HIV/AIDS in Zimbabwe

Posted By Admin
Categorized Under: Videos
Comments (0)

this is a video that i did for my english class. I wrote a research paper on the HIV/AIDS crisis in Zimbabwe and to help put my paper into perspective, i made this video to go along with it.

HIV Resistance

Posted By Admin
Categorized Under: Videos
Comments (0)

a detailed 3d animation about hiv resistance in organism visit my website for more medical animations and their downloads: http://rufusrajadurai.wetpaint.com/

TB + HIV: A Dual Epidemic

Posted By Admin
Categorized Under: Videos
Comments (0)

Fight AIDS. Fight TB. Fight Now...A film co-produced by UNAIDS and the Stop TB Partnership. Discusses TB, a leading killer among HIV-infected people with weakened immune systems.

Merck Vaccine Chief Brings HIV/AIDS to America

Posted By Admin
Categorized Under: Videos
Comments (0)

This stunning censored interview conducted by medical historian Edward Shorter for WGBH public television (Boston) and Blackwell Science was cut from The Health Century due to its huge liability--the admission that Merck drug company vaccines have traditionally been injecting cancer viruses (SV40 and others) in people worldwide. This segment of In Lies We Trust: The CIA, Hollywood & Bioterrorism, produced and freely contributed by consumer protector and public health expert, Dr. Leonard Horowitz, features the world's leading vaccine expert, Dr. Maurice Hilleman, who explains why Merck's vaccines have spread AIDS, leukemia, and other horrific plagues worldwide. Please forward this clip (link) to everyone you know who thinks vaccines are "safe and effective."

AIDS in Zimbabwe: HIV Epidemic in Sub-Saharan Africa

Posted By Admin
Categorized Under: Videos
Comments (0)

The UCSD Center for AIDS Research (CFAR) presents a series of lectures from international experts on the latest worldwide HIV research. In this program, James Hakim, M.D., Professor of Medicine and Chair, Department of Medicine, University of Zimbabwe discusses AIDS in Zimbabwe, a microcosm of the HIV epidemic in sub-Saharan Africa. Series: "CFAR, UCSD Center for AIDS Research " [6/2007] [Health and Medicine] [Professional Medical Education] [Show ID: 12277]

Jeff Rense - HIV XDR TB Strain

Posted By Admin
Categorized Under: Videos
Comments (0)

Jeff interviews Adriana Stuijt about a new strain of TB discovered in South Africa. It kills 100% of those infected, it's airborne, and kills in 20 days. My tip, buy a mask.

HIV and Malaria

Posted By Admin
Categorized Under: Videos
Comments (0)

The UCSD Center for AIDS Research (CFAR) presents a series of lectures from international experts on the latest worldwide HIV research. In this program, Kimberly C. Brouwer, Ph.D. Division of International Health & Cross-Cultural Medicine, UCSD, discusses: The Effect of Sub-Clinical Plasmodium Falciparum (malaria) Infection on HIV-1 Viral Load Early in Life. Series: "CFAR, UCSD Center for AIDS Research " [6/2007] [Health and Medicine] [Professional Medical Education] [Show ID: 12876]

AIDS remember me?

Posted By Admin
Categorized Under: Videos
Comments (0)

http://www.aids-remember-me.eu/ 740,000 people in the EU today have HIV/AIDS. One in three is unaware they have it. There is a rise of new infections in the EU and neighbouring countries. An EU survey reveals that in Europe less and less people know how the disease is transmitted and take the necessary precautions. Condoms are the best way to protect against HIV as well as other sexually-transmitted diseases such as herpes and condylomas. HIV is transmitted via mucus, wounds, used syringes and bodily fluids. Of these bodily fluids only 5 carry the disease from one person to another: blood, sperm, pre-seminal male secretions, vaginal secretions, and mother's milk. Download: http://ec.europa.eu/avservices/video/video_prod_en.cfm?type=detail&prodid=1273&src=1

Growing Up With HIV/AIDS

Posted By Admin
Categorized Under: Videos
Comments (0)

This is the story of Annabella, a young girl living with HIV who has found hope thanks to lifesaving programs supported by the Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation. Make a difference now by visiting www.pedaids.org.

HIV Replication and Life Cycle

Posted By Admin
Categorized Under: Videos
Comments (0)

http://www.FreeScienceLectures.com HIV replication is a complex multi-staged process that includes crucial steps taking place on the exterior as well as the interior of the target host cell. The first three steps involved in cell entry are termed attachment, co-receptor binding and fusion. Each step is crucial to successful viral reproduction. Once HIV virus penetrates the cell, it releases its RNA into the cell. --- It's Never too Late to Study: http://www.FreeScienceLectures.com --- Notice: This video is copyright by its respectful owners. The website address on the video does not mean anything. ---

Black Women and the HIV Epidemic

Posted By Admin
Categorized Under: Videos
Comments (0)

http://www.TheChatterRoom.com This short clip from CNN explores the HIV epidemic and how it affects Black Women. Black women in America now make up over 60% of the new HIV cases. Please use condoms or abstain from sex. No d- is worth your life. (^_^*)

Botswana miners struggle with HIV/Aids - 04 Dec 08

Posted By Admin
Categorized Under: Videos
Comments (0)

The African nation of Botswana has one of the world's highest known rates of HIV/AIDS infection. But the country also has a progressive programme to address the issue. Bernard Smith visited the mining town of Selibe Phikwe - where measures to stem the disease are beginning to work.

HIV in Tijuana

Posted By Admin
Categorized Under: Videos
Comments (0)

In this series from the CFAR National Symposium on HIV/AIDS Prevention & Transmission 2007, you will hear from experts from universities throughout the US and from South Africa, updating us on their latest research and findings. Join Kimberly Brouwer, PhD, University of California, San Diego, as she presents on HIV in the Unique Environment of an International Border/Recent Findings from Tijuana, Mexico. Series: "CFAR, UCSD Center for AIDS Research " [2/2008] [Health and Medicine] [Show ID: 13714]

Awaiting Tomorrow - people living with HIV/AIDS in Africa

Posted By Admin
Categorized Under: Videos
Comments (0)

December 10th is Intl Human Rights Day. Learn about human rights issues take action! http://hub.witness.org/TakeActionNow "Awaiting Tomorrow" is an urgent call to action by people living with HIV/AIDS in war-torn Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) to confront the disease that is ravaging communities throughout Africa.

Some Ways You Can Contract HIV and the Risk of Each One

Posted By Admin
Categorized Under: Videos
Comments (0)

People often ask us which sexual practices have a relatively higher risk of HIV transmission and which have a relatively lower risk. This video discusses the estimated risk of HIV transmission for mother-to-child transmission, needle sharing, and for some common sexual practices including anal sex, vaginal sex, and oral sex on men and women. These statistics are just estimates based on the currently available scientific information. The risk of contracting HIV from a partner will also vary at different times during their infection. A person who has contracted HIV is most infectious shortly after they have acquired the virus, known as primary HIV infection. The cited figures here are estimated average risks, and risk of transmitting HIV can be increased or decreased by many other factors. For example, for sexual contact, if either or both partners have other sexually transmitted diseases, the risk of HIV transmission will be increased. Remember, the averages won't help you if you're the one who becomes infected. For example, unprotected insertive oral sex on a man may carry an estimated risk of 1 chance of HIV transmission in 20,000, but if you're the one who gets infected, HIV transmission is still 100% for you. These statistics are not a license to engage in unprotected sex. Rather, they will hopefully help people to realize that all of the sexual practices we've listed carry some risk of HIV transmission, so it's vital if you're sexually active to always practice safer sex techniques such as the use of condoms. For more information, visit http://www.GlobalLifeworks.org/ and http://www.AIDSvideos.org/. [Want to help prevent the spread of HIV? Volunteer to translate scripts into other languages! Visit AIDSvideos.org for details.]