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DISEASE PROGRESSION
DESPITE ANTIBODIES
It has been argued that HIV cannot cause AIDS because the body develops
HIV-specific antibodies following primary infection (Duesberg, 1992).
This reasoning ignores numerous examples of viruses other than HIV
that can be pathogenic after evidence of immunity appears (Oldstone,
1989). Primary poliovirus infection is a classic example of a disease
in which high titers of neutralizing antibodies develop in all infected
individuals, yet a small percentage of individuals develop subsequent
paralysis (Kurth, 1990). Measles virus may persist for years in brain
cells, eventually causing a chronic neurological disease despite the
presence of antibodies (Gershon, 1990). Viruses such as cytomegalovirus,
herpes simplex and varicella zoster may be activated after years of
latency even in the presence of abundant antibodies (Weiss and Jaffe,
1990). Lentiviruses with long and variable latency periods, such as
visna virus in sheep, cause central nervous system damage even after
the specific production of neutralizing antibodies (Haase, 1990).
Furthermore, it is now well-documented that HIV can mutate rapidly
to circumvent immunologic control of its replication.
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