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Astroglide Fights HIV in Lab Test
by Condomania Articles.
Reuters reports that Astroglide Personal Lubricant has been found to block
the replication of the human immunodeficiency virus in lab tests.
The lubricants killed HIV-infected white blood cells and HIV in seminal
fluid, according to researchers from the University of Texas Medical Branch
in Galveston.
Dr. Samuel Baron and colleagues conducted the study to examine
over-the-counter vaginal preparations for their ability to inhibit
HIV production.
While the spermicide nonoxynol-9 has been found in lab tests to fight
HIV, it doesn't prevent the virus from spreading, probably because it
causes genital irritation, the authors note in the July 20th issue of
AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses. For this reason, the researchers
only looked at non-irritating lubricants.
Astroglide inhibited HIV production by more than 1,000-fold when mixed
in test tubes with cells contained in semen. When the preparation was
mixed with cell-free semen containing the virus, it cut HIV replication
eightfold.
Inactivation of the virus began within 5 minutes after the preparation
was added, and the lubricant remained active for more than 8 hours at
human body temperature. When layered over cells, the lubricant was still
able to kill, indicating that their protective activity can diffuse into
seminal fluid. The lubricant was still active when diluted in a one-to-four
ratio.
Since submission of their report, the investigators have identified two
components that are responsible for the inhibitory effects, Baron told
Reuters Health. These components appear to interact with the lipid or
fatty membrane that surrounds both the virus and the infected cells,
he said.
"These materials we have identified are by the most stringent standards
safe, falling in the Food and Drug Administration's No. 1 safety category,"
Baron noted. "This separates them out completely from nonoxynol-9."
He cautions that condoms remain the recommended method for preventing HIV
transmission during sexual activity. However, Baron and his colleagues highly
recommend that field trials of these agents be conducted among people at risk.
SOURCE: Reuters Health & AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses 2001;17:997-1002.
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