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The Michigan Messenger going forward

By Staff Report | 11.16.11

I am writing today to announce the closure of the Michigan Messenger. After four years of operation in Michigan, the board of the American Independent News Network, has decided to shift publication of its news into a single site, The American Independent at Americanindependent.com. This is part of a shift in strategy, towards new forms [...]

Colorado-based abstinence program provided false and misleading information to Michigan students

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By Todd A. Heywood | 11.16.11

An abstinence-only presentation provided to numerous school districts in Calhoun and Eaton Counties in October of this year provided false and misleading information to students about HIV, experts allege.

Class action lawsuit filed against MERS over unpaid taxes

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By Todd A. Heywood | 11.15.11

Two county registers of deeds filed a class action lawsuit Monday on behalf of Michigan’s 83 counties alleging that the Mortgage Electronic Registration Services owes millions of dollars in property title transfer taxes.

Schuette fights important mercury regulations

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By Eartha Jane Melzer | 11.14.11

Despite evidence of the impact of mercury on children and public health, Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette last month joined with 24 other state attorneys general in filing a lawsuit to scuttle new EPA regulations that would reduce mercury emissions from power plants.

Wall Street Journal says ‘cure’ for AIDS stumbled upon

By Todd A. Heywood | 11.07.08 | 5:58 pm

Doctors in Berlin, Germany, are reporting that a 42-year-old American living in that city may have eliminated the virus from his body after a bone marrow transplant.

According to the Wall Street Journal report, the man was suffering from leukemia and AIDS, and while he continues to receive treatment for the leukemia, the virus has not reappeared in his blood in 600 days.

Traditionally, when a person on antiretroviral medication to treat HIV stops taking the pills, the virus bursts back with a flurry of activity. But this unidentified patient stopped taking the medication and has not had any evidence of the virus in his blood since.

The report explains that doctors believe this is due to the man’s leukemia doctor use of bone marrow from a donor who had genetic immunity to HIV infection.

The development suggests a potential new therapeutic avenue and comes as the search for a cure has adopted new urgency. Many fear that current AIDS drugs aren’t sustainable. Known as antiretrovirals, the medications prevent the virus from replicating but must be taken every day for life and are expensive for poor countries where the disease runs rampant. Last year, AIDS killed two million people; 2.7 million more contracted the virus, so treatment costs will keep ballooning.

So what does this case indicate to experts? The Journal reports:

While cautioning that the Berlin case could be a fluke, David Baltimore, who won a Nobel prize for his research on tumor viruses, deemed it “a very good sign” and a virtual “proof of principle” for gene-therapy approaches. Dr. Baltimore and his colleague, University of California at Los Angeles researcher Irvin Chen, have developed a gene therapy strategy against HIV that works in a similar way to the Berlin case. Drs. Baltimore and Chen have formed a private company to develop the therapy.

“Sounds like good news so far — I’d be hesitant to call it a cure,” Mark Peterson of the Michigan Positive Action Coalition, or MI-POZ, a group of politically active HIV-positive people in Michigan, told Michigan Messenger in an e-mail. Peterson went on to say that the news underscored the importance of research into a specific class of drugs that stop the virus from invading human cells in the first place.

This is possibly very important news in the fight against HIV.

When antiretrovirals were first introduced, and viral loads (the number of viral particles in the blood) were found to have been suppressed to undetectable, doctors thought that eventually cells harboring HIV would die off and the person would be HIV-free. That did not happen. Researchers discovered that the virus incorporated itself into the genetic makeup of the infected person and waited for the opportunity to reignite the infection.

But in 1996, researchers also made another startling discovery, the Journal reports:

…researchers discovered that some gay men astonishingly remained uninfected despite engaging in very risky sex with as many as hundreds of partners. These men had inherited a mutation from both their parents that made them virtually immune to HIV.

The mutation prevents a molecule called CCR5 from appearing on the surface of cells. CCR5 acts as a kind of door for the virus. Since most HIV strains must bind to CCR5 to enter cells, the mutation bars the virus from entering. A new AIDS drug, Selzentry, made by Pfizer Inc., doesn’t attack HIV itself but works by blocking CCR5.

Craig Covey, executive director of the Midwest AIDS Prevention Project based in Ferndale, said he had not heard anything about the case or the reports, and was unable to comment.

Comments

  • endersister

    first i'd like to say, as a california resident, how much i enjoy the stories on the michigan messenger. great insight and quick delivery.

    regarding a potential cure for aids, i am thrilled. but this article got me wondering what benefits there are for certain entities for NOT finding a cure. in 20 years of research, the 1989 case was never thoroughly dissected? does anyone know what kind of drug wars are going on in the aids world?

  • tlh74

    while this article is interesting, it fails to mention the possibility that the man in question may have had a “false” positive, and they evidence of the so called “cure” is only anecdotal, im highly skeptical that there is a cure to HIV, as am person living with hiv and aids for over 8 years now, and knowing how the virus can remain dormant, the effects it has upon every person are different, and every person will respond to the virus differently, yet the virus has an ability to mutate by 30% in as little as 48 hours thus making the virus itself so difficult to treat, especially concerning the limited number of treatment options as well as the strict regime for treatment, and monitoring progress and so forth.

  • tlh74

    while this article is interesting, it fails to mention the possibility that the man in question may have had a “false” positive, and they evidence of the so called “cure” is only anecdotal, im highly skeptical that there is a cure to HIV, as am person living with hiv and aids for over 8 years now, and knowing how the virus can remain dormant, the effects it has upon every person are different, and every person will respond to the virus differently, yet the virus has an ability to mutate by 30% in as little as 48 hours thus making the virus itself so difficult to treat, especially concerning the limited number of treatment options as well as the strict regime for treatment, and monitoring progress and so forth.

  • tlh74

    while this article is interesting, it fails to mention the possibility that the man in question may have had a “false” positive, and they evidence of the so called “cure” is only anecdotal, im highly skeptical that there is a cure to HIV, as am person living with hiv and aids for over 8 years now, and knowing how the virus can remain dormant, the effects it has upon every person are different, and every person will respond to the virus differently, yet the virus has an ability to mutate by 30% in as little as 48 hours thus making the virus itself so difficult to treat, especially concerning the limited number of treatment options as well as the strict regime for treatment, and monitoring progress and so forth.