The HIV/AIDS pandemic has killed 39 million people worldwide, and nearly as many people are living with HIV infection today. The global response to this disease has come a long way since the emergence of HIV in the early 1980s, including more than 64 billion USD in international spending between 2002 and 2013 alone [1]. Due to the worldwide effort, HIV infection has been transformed from a death sentence into a manageable, chronic illness that can have limited impact on lifespan when treated properly [2]. Antiretroviral therapy, public health campaigns, and other education and prevention efforts have facilitated an age in which no one, regardless of age, gender, sexual orientation, nationality, or socioeconomic status should face despair on...
Early detection of HIV infection is the best way to prevent spread of the disease and to improve the...
The simple method for amplifying RNA targets (SMART) was used to detect K103N, a common HIV-1 revers...
The devastation caused by HIV is driving the development of new point-of-care diagnostics. The work ...
The HIV/AIDS pandemic has killed 39 million people worldwide, and nearly as many people are living w...
Abstract—Thirty-four million people are living with HIV world-wide, a disproportionate number of who...
Once a patient is diagnosed as HIV-positive, tests of viral load (the concentration of virus circula...
ABSTRACTViral load measurements are an essential tool for the long-term clinical care of human immun...
HIV has caused a global pandemic over the last three decades. There is an unmet need to develop poin...
Globally, HIV/AIDS claims more than two million lives each year. Further, the widespread co-infectio...
Background: More than 35 million people in developing countries are living with HIV infection. An en...
With timely diagnosis and correct treatment, people living with HIV/AIDS can consider the disease as...
Despite widened access to HIV testing, around half of those infected worldwide are unaware of their ...
HIV has become one of the most devastating pathogens in human history. Despite fast progress in HIV-...
HIV has become one of the most devastating pathogens in human history. Despite fast progress in HIV-...
Many individuals living in remote and resource-limited regions around the world face a barrier to ad...
Early detection of HIV infection is the best way to prevent spread of the disease and to improve the...
The simple method for amplifying RNA targets (SMART) was used to detect K103N, a common HIV-1 revers...
The devastation caused by HIV is driving the development of new point-of-care diagnostics. The work ...
The HIV/AIDS pandemic has killed 39 million people worldwide, and nearly as many people are living w...
Abstract—Thirty-four million people are living with HIV world-wide, a disproportionate number of who...
Once a patient is diagnosed as HIV-positive, tests of viral load (the concentration of virus circula...
ABSTRACTViral load measurements are an essential tool for the long-term clinical care of human immun...
HIV has caused a global pandemic over the last three decades. There is an unmet need to develop poin...
Globally, HIV/AIDS claims more than two million lives each year. Further, the widespread co-infectio...
Background: More than 35 million people in developing countries are living with HIV infection. An en...
With timely diagnosis and correct treatment, people living with HIV/AIDS can consider the disease as...
Despite widened access to HIV testing, around half of those infected worldwide are unaware of their ...
HIV has become one of the most devastating pathogens in human history. Despite fast progress in HIV-...
HIV has become one of the most devastating pathogens in human history. Despite fast progress in HIV-...
Many individuals living in remote and resource-limited regions around the world face a barrier to ad...
Early detection of HIV infection is the best way to prevent spread of the disease and to improve the...
The simple method for amplifying RNA targets (SMART) was used to detect K103N, a common HIV-1 revers...
The devastation caused by HIV is driving the development of new point-of-care diagnostics. The work ...