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Microbicide, Solution To Female HIV Infection?

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Since the Human Immune Virus and the Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (HIV/AIDS) pandemic became known in Nigeria in the mid eighties, no illness has caused more commotion and separated families and friends alike.

From being a rumour initially, it became a cruel reality which raised so much pandemonium that how it is transmitted from person to person became more horrifying and confusing almost by the day.

However, from the mid eighties to now, so much water had passed under the bridge. Form being regarded as the most dreaded diseases, which had no cure, HIV/AIDS is now manageable.

In fact, research has proved that an infected person can live a normal life like every other person. All it requires is awareness in the part of the infected person.

In spite of this encouraging development, however, research has also shown that the virus is still spreading and fastly too, for various reasons, which include the fact that people, mostly out of fear of being discriminated upon, prefer to keep their infection to themselves, or refuse to know their status.

Research has alo showed that majority of those infected are women, thus raising questions regarding why it is so.

It did not take long for researchers to reason that perharps this will not be far from the fact that women seem to be the most vulnerable when it comes to adopting preventive measures during heterosexual intercourse.

This is because the presumed efficacy  of such preventive measures as abstinence, use of condoms and being faithful to a partner could not stop more women from being infected. Hence the decision to come up with a preventive measure strictly to be controlled by women.

In the words of Dr. Orikomaba Korifama Obunge, consultant clinical microbiologist and Head of Medical Microbiology department, University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital (UPTH) ‘‘a lot of them (women) are still being infected, not because their partners are a little bit more adventurous, and the ability of them negotiating for the use of preventive measures such as condoms is not working much as it should.

‘‘The issue is that, can we not provide a preventive measure that is controlled by the women, that is capable of forming a barrier during heterosexual intercourse?’’

It is the search for this measure, according to Dr Obunge, that resulted in the emergence of  a concept of a microbiocide by a group of researchers and activities, which also include Dr Obunge.

According to a recent UNAIDS estimates, in 2009 more than 33 million people were living with HIV and approximately 2.5 million people were newly infected.

The estimates also showed that worldwide, nearly half of all individuals living with HIV are now women, who acquired the virus largely by heterosexual exposure.

Further more, many women, because  of limited economic options and gender inequality, cannot reliably negotiate sexual encounters, leaving them vulnerable to unwanted pregnancies and sexually transmitted infections (STIs), including HIV.

Thus, with clinical deployment of safe and effective HIV Vaccine still likely to be years away, topical microbicide formulations that are applied vaginally or rectally are receiving increasing attention as another strategy for HIV prevention.

The microbicide is a product in the form of a gel which could be infected intraveinously with the sole objective of preventing the transmission of the virus during heterosexual intercourse to the woman.

According to the researchers, a review of preclinical and clinical research on the development of microbicides formulated to prevent vaginal HIV transmission yielded 118 studies globally.

Presently, mathematical modeling has shown that if there is such a preventive measure that is workable, then millions of new infections could be prevented and it would be an encouragement for donor agencies to start working on it. Hence the emergence of research on microbicides.

In the words of Dr. Alan Stone of the Medical Research Council in the United Kingdom, ‘‘the development of an effective microbicide is a global priority of the highest order… The question is not whether the microbicide approach will prevent HIV infection but, rather, what proportion of HIV infections it will prevent.’’

Towards coming up with such a microbicide, two research organizations, FHI and Vera Halpen using collaborators in various countries embarked on research for the purpose. In Nigeria the collaborators were Dr. Orikomaba Korifama Obunge and Dr F.S.Ogusola of the university of Lagos.

The research went through the first and second phases, which are smaller studies that look at safety at does and at efficacy before this third phase which entailed randomized clinical/controlled trails on large groups of participants to look at the efficacy of the microbicide.

The products of the investigation were 6% Sodium Cellulose Sulphate (CS), which is a gel that was tested as a possible topical microbicide, but in 2007 was found to be  in effective. Researchers thought that CS could potentially block HIV infection (and possibly others STIs) by creating a barrier between the virus and the woman’s cells in the vagina which the virus targets for infection. This would make it more difficult for the virus to enter the woman’s cell.

The other products of investigation are vaginal gel, single use applicator, and 3.5ml of gel.

According to the researchers, the study design at this phase III entailed randomized placebo controlled trail, in which a total of 2160 women at high risk of HIV/STI were in Lagos while the other half were in Port Harcourt.

The placebo is not the treatment being tested, but looks exactly like the treatment. For topical microbicides trails, the control group received a gel that looked and was used the same day as the gel given to the intervention group, except that it did not contain the microbicide.

Placebos are used in blinded clinical trails so that participants for twelve months, while tests were carried out for HIV, gonnorhoea and Chlamydia at baseline and at each monthly follow up visits.

A summary of the research showed that the duration of the study was 12 months of participants recruitment, 12 months of product used for each participants and 26 total months in the fields including screening and close-down, while the primary objective of the study was to determine the effectiveness of CS gel in preventing male-female vaginal transmission of HIV infection among women of high risk.

The primary endpoint is the incidence of HIV-1 and HIV-2 infection as determined by detection of HIV antibodies from all Mucosal Transudate (OMT) specimens, while the secondary objective is to determine the effectiveness of CS gel in preventing malae-female  transmission of gonnorrhoea and chlamydial infection among women at high risk.

The secondary end point is the incidence of the genital gonorrhea or chlamydial infections as determined by DNA probe technology from self-administered vaginal swabs .

At the end of the study, it was found that the CS gel (this microbicide) did not protect against HIV and canot be used, “there were more infection in CS group compared to the placebo group from other studies outside Nigeria resulting in the stoppage of the study on CS3, and the preventive measure (HIV risk reduction messages works)”

It was thus agreed that community/scientist rapport must recognize that community involvement is an essential component in microbicide trail; that the approach to such involvement must consider the local setting (community politics and environment) that the relationship is a dynamic one.

Others are that it is clear the development of a topical microbicide to prevent the sexual transmission of HIV is scientifically, ethically and culturally complicated; and that in spite of these the benefit in lives protected may far exceed those risks seen and, as yet, unforeseen.

The implication of the foregoing is as encouraging as it is dreadful. Encouraging  because by this and other researches carried out, all in pursuit of a solution to the HIV/AIDS pandemic show that there is a relentless quest to get a solution .

However, the situation looks dreadful considering that such solution seem to have remained evasive and hence almost impossible to come by.

This, therefore, is an indicator that a lot of work still needs to be done to thoroughly put the transmission of HIV under check, particularly as it concerns the most vulnerable groups.

Such areas that require more job to be done include community sensitization/involvement, capacity building programmes for various stakeholders, including families.

The question that should thus be on every bodies mind is “which way forward in HIV prevention.”

 

Sogbeba Dokubo

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RSG Plans Fresh Training For TBAs

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Plans are in the works by the authorities in the Rivers State Ministry of Health to conduct training for Traditional Birth Attendants(TBAs) in the State.
State Commissioner for Health, Dr. Adaeze Oreh gave the hint while chatting with newsmen recently in Port Harcourt.
She said the training has become crucial to school the TBAs on methods and measures to complement in maternal health care.
In her words,”  We are aware of of their roles, but we need to be confident that they can still play that role, especially the skills set needed to complement what government is doing.’’
Dr. Oreh explained that maternal and child care has evolved, hence, the TBAs need to be schooled,” we want them to scale up their skills, especially on high risk pregnancies.”
She continued, “ We want to make sure that our system mops up those high risk pregnancies, because we know that many of them carry out clandestine activities they are not helping us.”
Assuring of improved manpower in the State health sector, Dr. Oreh said the Governor Siminalayi Fubara administration has embarked on fresh recruitment exercise for health workers to meet current challenges.
She assured that once the recruitment exercise is completed, the various health centres and hospitals will be staffed with qualified manpower to provide efficient health services in the State.

Kevin Nengia

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Viral Hepatitis Claims 3,500 Lives Daily -WHO

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The World Health Organisation (WHO) has raised an alarm on viral hepatitis infection that claims 3,500 lives each day.
According to the World Health Organisation (WHO) 2024 Global Hepatitis Report, the number of lives lost due to the viral hepatitis is increasing.
The disease is the second leading infectious cause of death globally — with 1.3 million deaths per year, the same as tuberculosis, a top infectious killer.
The report, released at the World Hepatitis Summit revealed that despite better tools for diagnosis and treatment, and decreasing product prices, testing and treatment coverage rates have stalled.
It, however, said, reaching the WHO elimination goal by 2030 is still  achievable, if swift actions are taken now.
New data from 187 countries show that the estimated number of deaths from viral hepatitis increased from 1.1 million in 2019 to 1.3 million in 2022. Of these, 83percent were caused by hepatitis B, and 17percent by hepatitis C. Every day, there are 3,500 people dying globally due to hepatitis B and C infections.
“This report paints a troubling picture: despite progress globally in preventing hepatitis infections, deaths are rising because far too few people with hepatitis are being diagnosed and treated,” said WHO’s Director-General, Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.
He added, “WHO is committed to supporting countries to use all the tools at their disposal – at access prices – to save lives and turn this trend around.”
Updated WHO estimates indicate that 254 million people lived with hepatitis B and 50 million with hepatitis C in 2022. Half the burden of chronic hepatitis B and C infections is among people 30–54 years old, with 12percent among children under 18 years of age. Men account for 58percent of all cases.
New incidence estimates indicate a slight decrease compared to 2019, but the overall incidence of viral hepatitis remains high.
In 2022, there were 2.2 million new infections, down from 2.5 million in 2019.
These include 1.2 million new hepatitis B infections and nearly one million new hepatitis C infections. More than 6,000 people are getting newly infected with viral hepatitis each day.
The revised estimates are derived from enhanced data from national prevalence surveys. They also indicate that prevention measures such as immunisation and safe injections, along with the expansion of hepatitis C treatment, have contributed to reducing the incidence.

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How Dates Boost Fertility -Research

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Now, researchers in a study, suggest that date palm is an arsenal to fight infertility in couples. They found that 1-month consumption of date palm has a positive impact on the sexual function of infertile couples.
The study to investigate the effect of date palms on the sexual function of infertile couples  was in the 2022 edition of the BMC Research Notes.
In a double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial conducted on infertile women and their husbands who were referred to infertility clinics in Iran in 2019, researchers found sexual function in females (arousal, orgasm, lubrication, pain during intercourse, satisfaction) in the intervention group was significantly increased compared to females in the control group that had no date palm.
Infertility and infertility management affects different dimensions of a couple’s life. Sexual dysfunctions can appear in both partners and might provoke problems in every stage of sexual response. Infertility negatively affects the sexuality of infertile couples.
Numerous studies show that infertile women have lower sexual function than fertile women. Sexual satisfaction is strongly affected by the consequences of infertility such as reduced self-esteem, feelings of depression and anxiety, and failed sexual relationships.
The intervention group was given a palm date capsule and the control group was given a placebo. The starch powder was applied to prepare the placebo capsules.
Also, all areas of male sexual function (erectile function, orgasmic function, sexual desire, intercourse satisfaction and overall satisfaction) significantly increased in the intervention group compared to the control group.
Infertility is not only a medical problem but also affects all personal dimensions and social life of most infertile individuals. Infertile couples are more prone to psychological problems (anxiety, depression, and stress), which may result in marital distress, social dysfunction (stigma, social exclusion, and feelings of failure), and reduced quality of life.
Infertility and infertility management affects different dimensions of a couple’s life. Sexual dysfunctions can appear in both partners and might provoke problems in every stage of sexual response. Infertility negatively affects the sexuality of infertile couples.
Numerous studies show that infertile women have lower sexual function than fertile women. Sexual satisfaction is strongly affected by the consequences of infertility such as reduced self-esteem, feelings of depression and anxiety, and failed sexual relationships.
Dates palm is known to have come from what is now Iraq. In Nigeria, dry and soft date fruits are sold out for consumption. However, in the northern part, they are added to the locally brewed alcoholic beverage to help reduce the intoxicating power.
Dates are a good source of energy and vitamins and important elements such as phosphorus, iron, potassium and a significant amount of calcium. It is also rich in phenolic compounds possessing free radical scavenging and antioxidant activity.
Since ancient times, the date palm has been used in Greece, China and Egypt to treat infertility and increase sexual desire and fertility in females. There are few studies on the effect of date palms on male and female sexual function in human beings.
Besides, studies have shown that the various parts of its plant are widely used in traditional medicine for the treatment of various disorders which include memory disturbances, fever, inflammation, paralysis, loss of consciousness and nervous disorder.
Culled from Tribune online.

 

The researchers suggested that the improvement in male and female sexual function can be due to active ingredients and increased levels of sex hormones following the consumption of date palms since studies indicated that increasing sex hormones are effective in sexual function.

They, however, recommended more studies with a longer duration on the use of date palms on sex hormone levels in infertile couples.

Previously, a study revealed that using date palms in postmenopausal women for 1 month had a positive and significant impact on sexual desire and arousal.  Another suggested that using date palms had a positive impact on orgasm, satisfaction and lubrication in women and also reduced pain during intercourse in women.

In the laboratory, administering date palms to male rats and measuring their sexual behaviours, researchers showed that sexual behaviour parameters (number of ejaculations, number of intercourse) increased compared to the control group.

 

 

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