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idtag

Author

  • Peter Duesberg

Publisher

  • Medical Sciences

Category

  • Controversy

Topic

  • AIDS Paradox

Article Type

  • Scientific Paper

Publish Year

  • 1991

Page Properties
idmeta

Meta Description

  • The content discusses various aspects of AIDS epidemiology, citing numerous studies and authors. It includes references to HIV, medical research, and disease control efforts.

Summary

  • The content is a collection of scientific articles and reports related to the AIDS epidemic, including its origins, transmission, and treatment. The articles discuss the discovery of the HIV virus as the cause of AIDS, the development of diagnostic tests, and the challenges of treating and preventing the disease. Some articles also explore controversial theories about the cause of AIDS and the effectiveness of certain treatments. The content is written in technical language but aims to provide a comprehensive understanding of the AIDS epidemic for researchers and healthcare professionals.

Meta Tag

  • AIDS

  • Science

  • Duesberg, P. H.

  • Institute of Medicine

  • Gallo, R. C.

  • National Institute on Drug Abuse

  • J. Am. Med. Assoc.

  • World Health Organization

  • Curran, J. W.

  • Barre-Sinoussi, F.

  • Sonnabend, J. A.

  • Root-Bernstein, R.

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PETER H. DUESBERG
Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, 229 Stanley Hall University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720
Contributed by Peter H. Duesberg, October 11, 1990

Original Publication
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
Vol. 88, pp. 1575-1579, February 1991
Medical Sciences

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  • Peter Duesberg


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Publisher Tag

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Topic Tag

Medical Sciences

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  • AIDS Paradox

    • AIDS Definitions

    • AIDS Epidemiology

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Published Year

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ABSTRACT

The newly defined syndrome AIDS includes 25 unrelated parasitic, neoplastic, and noninfectious indicator diseases. Based on epidemiological correlations, the syndrome s thought to be due to a new, sexually or parenterally transmitted retrovirus termed human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). The following epidemiological data conflict with this hypothesis. (i) Noncorrelations exist between HIV and AIDS; for example, the AIDS risks of infected subjects vary >10-fold with their gender or country. Abnormal health risks that are never controlled as independent AIDS causes by AIDS statistics, such as drug addiction and hemophilia, correlate directly with an abnormal incidence of AIDS diseases. Above all, the AIDS diseases occur in all risk groups in the absence of HIV. (ii) American AIDS is incompatible with infectious disease, because it is almost exclusively restricted to males (91%), because if it occurs, then only on average 10 years after transfusion of HIV, because specific AIDS diseases are not transmissible among different risk groups, and because unlike a new infectious disease, AIDS has not spread exponentially since the AIDS test was established and AIDS received its current definition in 1987. (iii) Epidemiological evidence indicates that HIV is a long-established, perinatally transmitted retrovirus. HIV acts as a marker for American AIDS risks, because it is rare and not transmissible by horizontal contacts other than frequent transfusions, intravenous drugs, and repeated or promiscuous sex. It is concluded that American AIDS is not infectious, and suggested that unidentified, mostly noninfectiouspathogens cause AIDS.

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