December 2006
HIV medications are best at fighting the regular ("wild-type") -- not the mutated -- virus. Although most HIV mutations are harmless, sometimes HIV can get lucky: If a mutation differs in just the right way, it can render an HIV medication useless. If this happens, we say that HIV is "resistant" to that medication. Suppose you take your medications erratically -- meaning you frequently miss a dose. HIV will grab this opportunity to start making more copies of itself in your CD4 cells. As the amount of HIV in your body increases while you are not taking your medications consistently, so does the amount of mutated HIV -- including mutations that make your virus resistant to your medications.
In other words, if you miss doses of your medications too often, you're effectively training your mutated, drug-resistant HIV to survive better. The mutated virus may begin to make more and more copies of itself, and could eventually become the most common type of HIV in your body. Once this happens, no matter how much of that medication you take, it will no longer have an effect on your HIV. This means you've become resistant to that medication. Once your HIV has developed resistance to a medication, it will stay resistant forever, since resistant HIV, like wild-type HIV, can remain hidden in some of your cells.
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| If you often take your medications inconsistently, HIV will have a chance to make more copies of itself. Many of these new copies may have mutations, some of which might be resistant to one or more of your HIV medications. |
How Does Resistance Affect Your Treatment Options?
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| If you do not take your medications on time, HIV mutations can make up a larger and larger percentage of the HIV in your body, and the odds of developing drug resistance will greatly increase. |