New HIV vaccine could turn deadly condition into 'minor infection like herpes'!

After many decades at last scientist have found a vaccine to make sure you donтАЩt get HIV and makes those who have already got it, have no more fear of dying as you would if you caught incurable herpes is on the horizon.

Many people who was worried about all the money that was being thrown at scientific groups to search for ways to cure HIV was being abused, because with the chance of acquiring so many millions they did not want it to end, so they never found a cure. But now a scientific group in Spain has started to test a new vaccine to break the trend of look but donтАЩt find, even though the person who dose find the answer of curing HIV will be in for billions in revenue, but so much of it gets put back in experimentations.

The virus claimed the lives of a host of stars including Freddie Mercury, pictured, and Kenny Everett, Rock Hudson.

Did you know if Freddy Mercury had lived another year, he would still be alive now as the new cocktail of drugs they had in the early 1990s were just about to come on line, after a trial as has to happen with all new drugs.

A new HIV vaccine could turn the once deadly condition which has killed millions of people into a 'minor chronic infection' like herpes, say scientists.
The first human tests found nine-in-ten volunteers developed an immune response against the virus, with 85 per cent maintaining immunity for at least a year.
If bigger clinical trials are as successful the virus that claimed the lives of a host of stars including Freddie Mercury and Kenny Everett would no longer cause a disease and be much less contagious.

The success of the vaccine, known as MVA-B, is based on the ability of the human immune system to learn how to react over time against virus particles and infected cells.
Professor Mariano Esteban, of the Spanish Superior Scientific Research Council (CSIC) in Madrid, said: 'MVA-B vaccine has proven to be as powerful as any other vaccine currentlybeing studied, or even more.
'
It had already been successful in experiments on mice and monkeys and is based on a vaccine used to treat smallpox, with the addition of four HIV genes that are not able to self-replicate, guaranteeing safety.


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/artic ... erpes.html