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- Treating HIV | HIV | CDC
Overview HIV treatment (antiretroviral therapy or ART) involves taking medicine prescribed by a health care provider When taken as prescribed, HIV medicine can make the amount of virus in your body (viral load) so low that a test can't detect it (undetectable viral load)
- HIV AIDS - Diagnosis and treatment - Mayo Clinic
Treatment There's no cure for HIV AIDS Once you have the infection, your body can't get rid of it But there are medicines that can control HIV and prevent complications Everyone diagnosed with HIV should take antiretroviral therapy medicines, also called ART This is true no matter what stage the disease is in or what the complications are ART is usually a mix of two or more medicines
- HIV Treatment: The Basics | NIH - HIVinfo
Learn about the fundamentals of HIV treatment, including the types of HIV medicines, how they work, and how to take them
- HIV Treatment Overview
Drug resistance can cause HIV treatment to fail A person can initially be infected with drug-resistant HIV or develop drug-resistant HIV after starting HIV medicines Drug-resistant HIV also can spread from person to person Drug-resistance testing identifies which, if any, HIV medicines won’t be effective against your specific strain of HIV
- Patient education: Initial treatment of HIV (Beyond the Basics)
Comprehensive guide on initial HIV treatment, including antiretroviral therapy and management strategies for optimal patient outcomes
- Antiretroviral Treatment of Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV . . .
Antiretroviral Treatment of Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Infection - Learn about the causes, symptoms, diagnosis treatment from the MSD Manuals - Medical Consumer Version
- HIV medications list: Treatment, prevention, and how they work
There are many types of HIV medications, including antiretroviral drugs, which stop the virus from replicating Learn more about the many HIV treatments here
- HIV Treatment | Lets Stop HIV Together | CDC
HIV Treatment Works shows how people with HIV have overcome barriers to get in care and stay on treatment so that they can live longer, healthier lives, part of the Let’s Stop HIV Together campaign
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