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Scientists Explore Meth's Role in Immune System
NY Times ^ | February 22, 2005 | ANAHAD O'CONNOR

Posted on 02/22/2005 8:55:44 PM PST by neverdem

Reports that a New York man may be carrying a rare and possibly virulent strain of H.I.V. have focused new attention on the biological relationship between the virus and methamphetamine, a drug that has become increasingly entwined in the spread of sexually transmitted diseases in cities from San Francisco to Miami to New York.

Although methamphetamine, often called crystal meth or speed, is most troubling to health officials because of its role in blotting out inhibitions and fueling high-risk sexual behavior, experts say they are also grappling with mounting evidence that the drug by itself may increase a person's susceptibility to infection by crippling immune function and facilitating disease transmission.

"There seems to be something about methamphetamine that predisposes people to H.I.V. infection," said Dr. Grant Colfax, co-director of the H.I.V. epidemiology biostatistics and intervention section at the AIDS office of the San Francisco Department of Public Health. "When we look at why methamphetamine is increasingly responsible for the H.I.V. epidemic, I do think we need to look more closely at whether it is somehow suppressing immunity and increasing viral loads."

The National Institute on Drug Abuse has increased its funding of research on methamphetamine - including studies looking at how it interacts with H.I.V. - to $37 million in 2004 from $27 million in 2003.

Knowing what, if any, direct impact the drug may have on the virus has gained a sense of urgency in recent months. Nationwide, methamphetamine addiction has become the second most frequent reason for seeking substance abuse treatment, behind alcohol. And experts fear that more and more people, particularly gay men, are relying on the stimulating effects of the drug - in many cases combined with Viagra or other similar drugs - to engage in unprotected sex with multiple partners.

The man reported by health officials in New York to be carrying a rare strain of H.I.V. is believed to have used methamphetamine.

A long-term study of more than 4,000 gay men sexually active with more than one partner recently found that the odds of contracting H.I.V. climb substantially while using crystal meth, independent of other risk factors.

About a quarter of the men who were followed said that they had used crystal meth in the six months before the start of the study. They were all H.I.V. negative when it began.

By the end of the study, called the Explore Project, about 2.1 percent of the men had become infected. Unprotected sex with multiple partners was strongly associated with infection. But even after the researchers controlled for those behaviors and others, like injection drug use, the men who were taking crystal meth were twice as likely to contract H.I.V.

"This was a really surprising finding," said Dr. Colfax, a principal investigator on the study. "There's reason to think there's a combination of factors involved."

One of them may be crystal meth's impact on immune cells. Although research is limited, studies in animals and on cell cultures have found that methamphetamine suppresses killer T cells, a type of white blood cell that fights off pathogens.

That, combined with the drug's tendency to dry out mucosal membranes and cause abrasions in the mouth and rectum, might slightly increase a person's vulnerability to infection, said Dr. Antonio Urbina, the lead author of a study on crystal meth and H.I.V. that appeared last year in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases.

In those who are already infected, crystal meth may take a greater toll. Studies have found that it can interfere with antiretroviral medications and set off a surge in viral loads, accelerating the progression of the disease and making a person more infectious to others.

In a study published in the journal Infectious Diseases last year, for example, researchers looked at 230 people who were H.I.V. positive, two-thirds of them either former or active users of crystal meth.

Compared with other subjects, those who were regularly using crystal meth and were also on an antiretroviral medication had far higher viral loads.

Dr. Igor Grant, an author of the study, said one possibility was that the crystal meth users had failed to adhere to their treatment regimens, as often happens with drug abusers. But stopping and starting a medication can be deadly in its own right, other experts point out, because it allows drug resistant strains to emerge, similar to what occurs when antibiotics are not taken properly.

"If you're a person who is not adhering to your diabetes medication, that's one thing because you can hurt yourself but not others," said Dr. Roger J. Pomerantz, an AIDS specialist at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia who studies interactions between drugs and the virus. "But with this you can hurt others by increasing the likelihood of both transmission and drug resistance."

In studies, Dr. Pomerantz has found that although substances like heroin and alcohol also appear to increase viral replication, others, like caffeine, can actually reduce it.

Whatever crystal meth's influence on the immune system and viral replication turns out to be, experts stress that its most alarming impact is on behavior.

"I think that's really the biggest gorilla in the room," said Dr. Steve Shoptaw, a research psychologist at the University of California, Los Angeles, Integrated Substance Abuse Programs. "Being in a sex club for 36 hours on crystal meth and engaging in unprotected anal sex is really the most profound effect."


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Extended News; News/Current Events; Technical; US: California; US: New York
KEYWORDS: aids; drugabuse; health; hiv; hivaids; homosexual; immunesystem; wodlist
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To: Nuzcruizer
It only stands to reason that if one warms up the human body a couple degrees on a continuous basis, it becomes the perfect incubator for a whole variety of diseases, giving them a chance to mutate and adapt to it's host. Plus the hosts immune system can become compromised giving these viruses a chance to defeat them.

Where did you take your classes in immunology and microbiology?

My teachers taught that a fever was a defensive response to thwart an invading pathogen.

21 posted on 02/22/2005 10:38:33 PM PST by neverdem (May you be in heaven a half hour before the devil knows that you're dead.)
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To: neverdem
Its all Reagan's fault.


22 posted on 02/22/2005 11:24:04 PM PST by MRMEAN (This Tag-Line Is Evolving...)
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To: Ethrane
I have my doubts that methamphetamine does much to weaken the immune system.

Maybe its the side effects -- staying up for 3 to 4 days has to be physically stressful, and stress can depress immune function.

23 posted on 02/23/2005 4:45:04 AM PST by Pearls Before Swine
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To: Petronius
Making alcohol illegal increased the popularity of more potent forms of it. I think this is indisputable

That's interesting. Do you have a link for that?

I know that homemade "bathtub gin" was usually more powerful and sometimes more dangerous than conventional alcohol, but I never realized that it was becuase of a demand for stronger alcohol.

24 posted on 02/23/2005 6:30:26 AM PST by TomB ("The terrorist wraps himself in the world's grievances to cloak his true motives." - S. Rushdie)
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To: neverdem; All
And so it comes full circle...

Dr. Peter Duesberg has been ridiculed for this belief since the eighties.

http://www.virusmyth.net/aids/index/pduesberg.htm

Col Sanders

25 posted on 02/23/2005 7:47:03 AM PST by Col Sanders (I ought to tear your no-good Goddang preambulatory bone frame, and nail it to your government walls)
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To: TomB
I know that homemade "bathtub gin" was usually more powerful and sometimes more dangerous than conventional alcohol, but I never realized that it was becuase of a demand for stronger alcohol.

The supposedly increased demand for a stronger anything with any prohibition is not the case. It's another story of unintended consequences. When the penalty is the same, but the economic reward is so much greater, criminal smuggling on the black market will naturally tend towards the substance with more bang for the buck per unit weight, i.e. concentrations of active substances will tend to increase.

So rational smugglers will trade in hard liquor rather than beer, heroin rather than raw opium, crack or cocaine rather than coca leaves, etc. whenever a prohibition exists.

The subject of addiction has become extensive. Try reading the following pdf link at least until it deals with the American Whiskey Rebellion of 1791 with the same taxes on lower quality spirits as those on higher quality whiskey. It's the other side of what you get when the government distorts the market.

http://www.cato.org/pubs/journal/cj19n2/cj19n2-7.pdf

26 posted on 02/23/2005 9:03:12 AM PST by neverdem (May you be in heaven a half hour before the devil knows that you're dead.)
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To: neverdem

This was the theory I threw out there, in laymans terms ofcurse, when these stories first started to make the news.


27 posted on 02/23/2005 9:05:43 AM PST by riri
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To: Col Sanders
And so it comes full circle...

Dr. Peter Duesberg has been ridiculed for this belief since the eighties.

I'm familiar with Dr. Duesberg. How do you account for the effect of anti-retroviral medications on the decreased mortality of folks who are HIV positive, on the decreased vertical transmission from pregnant mother to child at childbirth by the short term use of those same medications, and the death by an AIDS diagnosis of healthcare personnel from accidental exposure to HIV?

28 posted on 02/23/2005 9:16:39 AM PST by neverdem (May you be in heaven a half hour before the devil knows that you're dead.)
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To: neverdem
. . . the drug's tendency to dry out mucosal membranes . . .

Losing Teeth Latest Meth Use Side Effect

29 posted on 02/23/2005 9:16:41 AM PST by LibWhacker
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To: neverdem
How do you account for...

I account for nothing.  I merely stated that the theory reflected in the story was not a new one.

If you have a bone to pick with Duesberg, I would suggest you take it up with him, perhaps at one of the many conferences he attends around the world discussing his theories.

Col Sanders

30 posted on 02/25/2005 9:12:33 AM PST by Col Sanders (I ought to tear your no-good Goddang preambulatory bone frame, and nail it to your government walls)
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