May 2008

A positive HIV antibody test is scary news but it's not a death sentence. As better therapies continue to be developed, it's entirely possible to live out a normal lifespan after testing positive. The key to living a long life with HIV is availing yourself of health care and suitable therapies.
A positive result is an important medical message that may help you save and extend your life. Whether you took the test or not, sooner or later you would have learned of your HIV status.
If you learn by testing, you have a chance to slow or prevent some of the possible health outcomes. Even if you didn't get tested, HIV would present itself at some point as an infection or damage to your immune system. And, if you had waited for HIV disease to present itself, many of your best medical options would already be lost.
Most testing sites provide counseling to help people handle the news. The real work, however, is up to you. Given the right attitude and the right information, most people can live for a long, long time. Getting informed and taking charge of your health will help you make the best of your situation.
This publication can help you with the things you need to do:
Reading this publication is a good first step. It's a little long, but it's worth the time. It's about saving your life.
HIV (human immunodeficiency virus) is the virus that causes AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome). Being HIV-positive does not mean that you have AIDS, but it does mean that you may develop AIDS. HIV attacks your immune system, gradually impairing how it functions.
Your immune system helps keep your body healthy by recognizing and attacking foreign substances, like viruses or bacteria. Over time, if it becomes seriously damaged or weakened by HIV, your body loses its ability to fight certain infections and cancers. These are called opportunistic infections (OIs).
AIDS is the most serious outcome of HIV infection. It occurs once your immune system has been significantly damaged. If you have certain OIs, it will lead to an AIDS diagnosis. This is because the presence of these OIs in your body points to a significantly damaged immune system.
An AIDS diagnosis will also be given if the counts of your immune system cells (called CD4+ T cells or simply CD4s) fall below 200. These cells are the key players in your immune system. Their "normal" range in a healthy HIV-negative person is 500–1,500 cells/mm3.
This gradual destruction of the immune system doesn't happen the same way in everyone, or even at the same pace. In some, it may not happen at all. In a small percentage of people, HIV destroys their immune systems very rapidly, in just a few years. But others remain well for 10–15 years or longer. On average, without using HIV therapy, most people remain well for about ten years before facing their first serious symptoms.
A number of things are well known about HIV infection:
HIV is a "spectrum" illness: all who are infected have the same disease, but there are different stages to it. AIDS is the name given only to the later most serious stage. In the earlier and less serious stages, people are HIV-positive, meaning they tested positive on an HIV antibody test but they have no life-threatening symptoms of illness. If left untreated, most people generally progress along the spectrum toward AIDS.
HIV disease can progress slowly or quickly. Several studies have researched the rate at which it progresses when left untreated. Most conclude that about half of HIV-infected people progress to AIDS if left untreated within about ten years of infection. About three out of four (75%) reach AIDS by the 15th year.
These studies conclude that HIV is a progressive disease that leads to symptomatic illness in most people over time. Children born with HIV and people infected through blood transfusion seem to get sick more quickly. Studies suggest that when women have access to and seek regular care and monitoring, their progression rates are similar to and perhaps even slower than men. Studies that include people with hemophilia are inconclusive about their rates of progression.
Why people progress at different rates is uncertain. It may be due to differences in the strain of HIV a person gets. Others believe it is influenced by genetic differences in people, while others suspect that lifestyle factors make a difference.

