Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byLilian Manning Modified over 9 years ago
1
Lesson 3 HIV/AIDS
2
What is HIV/AIDS? Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)- virus that attacks the immune system Once it enters the body, it finds a way to destroy the white blood cells that fight disease Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS)- a disease in which the immune system is weakened AIDS has become one of the deadliest diseases in human history 25 million people around the world have died from AIDS Considered a pandemic- global outbreak Statistics of HIV/AIDS Approx. 12 million of the people who have HIV/AIDS are in the 15-24 age group Half of all new HIV infections are among young people. 7,000 young people become infected everyday.
3
Understanding HIV/AIDS The virus cannot live outside the human body Exposure to air at room temperature kills the virus HIV cannot spread through airborne transmission or casual contact HIV is transmitted only when one person’s infected blood, semen, or vaginal secretions comes in contact w/ another person’s broken skin or mucous membranes (found in mouth, eyes, nose, vagina, rectum)
4
HIV can be spread: 1) During sexual intercourse 2) Sharing needles 3) From mother to baby
5
How HIV Affects the Immune System HIV attacks the body’s immune system by destroying lymphocytes (specialized white blood cells that perform many immune functions) 2 types of lymphocytes: B Cells and T Cells. Helper T Cells stimulate B Cells to produce antibodies which destroy pathogens that enter the body. When HIV enters certain cells, including lymphocytes, it reproduces itself and eventually destroys the cell. HIV can mutate causing the anitbodies not to recognize it. As more cells are destroyed, the immune system becomes weaker Body becomes more vulnerable to AIDS-opportunistic illnesses-infections the body could fight off if the immune system were healthy
6
3 Stages of HIV before progressing to AIDS 1) Asymptomatic stage 2) Middle Stage 3) Symptomatic Stage 4) AIDS Stage
7
Giving or Receiving Blood: Is It Safe? Some people fear they might be infected w/ HIV when donating or receiving blood. Health care professionals always use sterile needles to draw blood All donated blood has been tested for HIV since 1985 U.S. blood supply is among the safest in the world
8
Answer the following questions and hand in 1) How does HIV affect the human immune system? 2) How can you protect yourself from contracting HIV/AIDS? 3) Why do the body’s antibodies fail to protect people from HIV? 4) Why has the CDC implemented mandatory testing for all donated blood? 5) How does the immune system respond to the presence of HIV in the body?
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.