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Author Topic: Resistance to partner's meds?  (Read 1895 times)

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Offline Etay1207

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  • Posts: 131
Resistance to partner's meds?
« on: March 27, 2010, 08:56:15 am »
Hey guys, I have a question about drug resistance. My partner and I are versatile with each other. He's on meds and I'm not. Are there traces of the meds in his semen? Could I become resistant to his regiment?
POZ since 1999
1/07 tcells: 530 vl: 72,922 7/07 tcells: 542 vl: 26,577
9/08 tcells: 339 vl: 56,120  7/09 tcells: 267 vl: 663,160
11/09 tcells: 71 vl: 498,670 2/10 tcells: 52 vl: 322,000
 no meds and feeling great!

Offline Assurbanipal

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  • Taking a forums break, still see PM's
Re: Resistance to partner's meds?
« Reply #1 on: March 27, 2010, 10:28:59 am »
With your viral load, no.


Resistance is an example of Darwinian evolution.  HIV mutates randomly and if those mutations give it an advantage in your body, the mutant forms will survive and reproduce gradually replacing the others.

But your viral load shows you are not getting enough drugs to make it so the virus needs a mutation in order to thrive.  It's just thriving away there   :(

5/06 VL 1M+, CD4 22, 5% , pneumonia, thrush -- O2 support 2 months, 6/06 +Kaletra/Truvada
9/06 VL 3959 CD4 297 13.5% 12/06 VL <400 CD4 350 15.2% +Pravachol
2007 VL<400, 70, 50 CD4 408-729 16.0% -19.7%
2008 VL UD CD4 468 - 538 16.7% - 24.6% Osteoporosis 11/08 doubled Pravachol, +Calcium/D
02/09 VL 100 CD4 616 23.7% 03/09 VL 130 5/09 VL 100 CD4 540 28.4% +Actonel (osteoporosis) 7/09 VL 130
8/09  new regimen Isentress/Epzicom 9/09 VL UD CD4 621 32.7% 11/09 VL UD CD4 607 26.4% swap Isentress for Prezista/Norvir 12/09 (liver and muscle issues) VL 50
2010 VL UD CD4 573-680 26.1% - 30.9% 12/10 VL 20
2011 VL UD-20 CD4 568-673 24.7%-30.6%
2012 VL UD swap Prezista/Norvir for Reyataz drop statin CD4 768-828 26.7%-30.7%
2014 VL UD - 48
2015 VL 130 Moved to Triumeq

Offline Ann

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    • Num is sum qui mentiar tibi?
Re: Resistance to partner's meds?
« Reply #2 on: March 27, 2010, 10:52:15 am »
The worry about drug resistance being passed on to another person during sex has nothing to do with meds being in semen. It's to do with a resistant virus being passed on.

People who end up with previously unknown (in them) drug resistance due to intercourse are said to have been reinfected or superinfected. So far, this has only been seen to happen in the very early days of their original infection. And there's only been a handful of cases.



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"...health will finally be seen not as a blessing to be wished for, but as a human right to be fought for." Kofi Annan

Nymphomaniac: a woman as obsessed with sex as an average man. Mignon McLaughlin

HIV is certainly character-building. It's made me see all of the shallow things we cling to, like ego and vanity. Of course, I'd rather have a few more T-cells and a little less character. Randy Shilts

Offline newt

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  • the one and original newt
Re: Resistance to partner's meds?
« Reply #3 on: March 27, 2010, 03:25:56 pm »
Hmmm

The important factor here is the viral load of your partner, if he's undetectable, say below 50 copies, I wouldn't worry, if not then I would (and he should be attending to his adherence/speaking to his doc).

- matt
"The object is to be a well patient, not a good patient"

 


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