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- <text>
- <title>
- (1982) Deadly Spread Of AIDS
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1982 Highlights
- </history>
- <link 07033>
- <link 04905>
- <link 02543>
- <link 09029>
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- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- September 6, 1982
- MEDICINE
- The Deadly Spread of AIDS
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Homosexuals, Haitians and hemophiliacs fall victim
- </p>
- <p> It began suddenly, in the autumn of 1979. Young homosexual men
- with a history of promiscuity started showing up at the medical
- clinics of New York City, Los Angeles and San Francisco with a
- bizarre array of ailments. Some had Pneumocystis carinii
- pneumonia, a deadly disease rarely seen except in drug-weakened
- cancer and transplant patients. Others bore the purplish skin
- lesions of Kaposi's sarcoma, a cancer that is usually confined
- to elderly men of Mediterranean extraction and young males in
- Equatorial Africa. Still others had developed strange fungal
- infections or other rare cancers. All had one thing in common:
- an immune system so severely impaired that they were living
- playgrounds for infectious agents. As soon as one bug could be
- brought under control, these patients would fall prey to another,
- gradually wasting away.
- </p>
- <p> It has been 16 months since the Centers for Disease Control in
- Atlanta began compiling statistics on acquired immuno-deficiency
- syndrome, or AIDS, as the disease is now known. During that
- period, AIDS has struck 547 people in the U.S. and at least 21
- abroad, killing 232, more than toxic shock syndrome and the
- Philadelphia outbreak of Legionnaire's disease combined. "This
- is a very, very dramatic illness," says Dr. James Curran, head
- of the 120-member CDC task force on AIDS. "I think we can say
- quite assuredly that it is new." What makes AIDS especially
- alarming, says Curran, is that its incidence is rising, from one
- case a day in the first six months, to two or three cases a day
- in the past three months. What is more, the epidemic has spread
- beyond the homosexual community into several other segments of
- the U.S. population.
- </p>
- <p> AIDS victims fall into four general groups (with some
- overlapping):
- </p>
- <p>-- 75% are homosexual men. Most are Caucasians in their 30s and
- 40s with a college education, incomes averaging $20,000, a
- history of prior infection with mononucleosis and veneral
- disease, and a sex life that has included many partners, more
- than 500 in several cases.
- </p>
- <p>-- 25% are intravenous-drug abusers, also in their 30s, but usually
- black or Hispanic, heterosexual, and with a high school education
- at most. Of this group, 19% are women.
- </p>
- <p>-- 6% are Haitian immigrants, three of them female, most of them
- heterosexuals and non-addicts. All are believed to have been
- infected before coming to the U.S.
- </p>
- <p>-- .5% (three in all) are hemophiliacs who are not gay, Haitian or
- drug addicted.
- </p>
- <p> The search for a common thread among these widely diverse groups
- has confounded researchers from coast to coast. When AIDS was
- confined to the gay community, says Curran, "our efforts were
- concentrated on trying to dissect out life-style differences."
- Various sexual practices and the use of amyl nitrite "poppers,"
- inhalants widely used by homosexuals to enhance orgasm, were
- among the subjects investigated. The life-style theory does not,
- however, explain the emergence of AIDS in non-gay populations.
- Most researchers now believe that an infectious agent is involved
- in AIDS. This agent is probably transmissible in a variety of
- ways, through lesions caused by anogenital sex, for example, or
- by dirty hypodermic needles. The hemophiliac cases raise the
- frightening possibility that it can also be transferred through
- blood transfusions. One model for such an agent is the hepatitis
- B virus, which commonly infects homosexuals, drug addicts,
- donor-blood recipients and, partly because of poor sanitary
- conditions, most Haitians. A few researchers speculate that the
- AIDS agent may have originated in Haiti and been sexually
- transmitted to American homosexuals vacationing there.
- </p>
- <p> The narrow geographic distribution of AIDS further supports the
- transmissible-agent theory. Half the cases occurred in New York,
- 20% in California. More to the point, AIDS has been traced from
- sexual partner to partner. In one Los Angeles study, nine out
- of 13 patients had had sexual contact with one another. In San
- Francisco, six pairs of "roommates" have been stricken with
- Kaposi's sarcoma.
- </p>
- <p> So far, efforts to isolate an AIDS bug have come to nothing.
- The CDC has cultured specimens from lymph nodes, urine, feces
- and blood of AIDS victims and then inoculated them into specially
- bred marmosets, at a cost of $25,000 for testing on each animal.
- Unfortunately, as Curran points out, "it is not known whether
- there is a transmissible agent, whether the patients we're
- studying harbor it, which body secretion may contain it, and
- whether marmosets are an appropriate species."
- </p>
- <p> While some investigators delve into the question of AIDS
- transmission, others are exploring the nature of the disease.
- The type of immunosuppression found in AIDS patients appears to
- be unique, affecting white blood cells called T lymphocytes (T
- for thymus, which plays a role in their development). Certain
- of these cells help defend the body against viruses, foreign
- tissue (like organ transplants) and the growth of cancer cells.
- There are several types, including helper T cells, which promote
- the production of antibodies against foreign invaders, and
- suppressor T cells, which reduce antibody output. Healthy
- individuals have twice as many helpers as suppressors. In AIDS
- victims, the ratio is reversed; helper cells are depleted. No
- one knows what happens to these cells, but New York Immunologist
- Roger Enlow has a theory: "Just as hepatitis B virus
- preferentially attacks liver cells, it is probable and even
- likely to have a virus that attacks helper T cells."
- </p>
- <p> Theories are, of course, of little use for those now suffering
- or at high risk of contracting AIDS. Panic has set in on
- Greenwich Village streets and in "the Castro," San Francisco's
- gay quarter. Local AIDS hot lines are receiving 30 calls a day.
- There is evidence that at least some gays are curbing their night
- life out of fear.
- </p>
- <p> Because of the widespread concern over AIDS, more victims are
- seeking medical attention at the first signs of the disease.
- Often these include low-grade fever, swollen glands and general
- malaise. Early detection makes it easier to control infections
- with antibiotics and to treat Kaposi's by surgical excision of
- lesions, chemotherapy and, more recently, the experimental use of
- interferon. The discovery that Kaposi's is more likely to strike
- a certain genetic type has made high-risk individuals easier to
- identify.
- </p>
- <p> It is hard to find anything positive in a deadly plague, but
- immunologists, virologists and cancer experts agree that AIDS
- represents a remarkable experiment of nature. The new scourge,
- says New York Immunobiologist Pablo Rubinstein, "may teach us
- more about cancer and old, familiar diseases than we are able to
- fathom at this time."
- </p>
- <p>-- By Claudia Wallis. Reported by Richard Bruns/New York and
- Joyce Leviton/Atlanta</p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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