Sunday, February 25, 2007

Childhood asthma

Childhood asthma
From MayoClinic.com
Special to Health

Introduction

Childhood asthma has become more widespread in recent decades. As the most common chronic illness in children, childhood asthma causes more missed school and places more limits on activity than any other disease.

Childhood asthma and adult asthma have the same underlying cause — continuous inflammation of the airways leading to the lungs. This inflammation makes the airways overly sensitive and prone to tightening and constricting when irritated. Fortunately, childhood asthma is treatable. With the right medications and action plan, a child with asthma can enjoy normal activities with few disruptions.

Signs and symptoms

The most common signs and symptoms of childhood asthma are:

  • Coughing
  • Wheezing
  • Shortness of breath
  • Chest congestion
  • Chest tightness

Additional signs and symptoms of asthma in infants include:

  • Rattly cough
  • Recurrent bronchitis with croup, bronchiolitis or pneumonia

While wheezing is most commonly associated with asthma, not all children with asthma wheeze. Likewise, not all children who have wheezing episodes have asthma. Your child may have only one sign or symptom, such as a lingering cough or chest congestion. Because symptoms of asthma can be related to other disorders and illnesses, your doctor will consider frequency of the symptoms along with other factors before making a diagnosis.

Causes

In children with asthma, the airways leading to the lungs are chronically inflamed and often swollen. This makes the airway muscles sensitive and reactive. Asthma triggers, such as smoke or allergens, can make the airway muscles tighten and constrict and may cause asthma symptoms. Triggers are different for everyone. The most common triggers include:

Irritants

  • Tobacco smoke
  • Exercise
  • Weather changes or cold air
  • Environmental pollutants

Allergens

  • Dust mites
  • Pet dander
  • Pollen
  • Mold

Other factors

  • Upper respiratory infections
  • Rhinitis or sinusitis
  • Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), a condition in which stomach acids back up into the esophagus
Risk factors

Both genetic and environmental factors can increase your child's chances of having asthma. Children with a family history of asthma are at greater risk of developing the disease. Other environmental factors that may increase your child's chances of developing asthma include:

  • Previous allergic reactions (stuffy nose or skin rash) to environmental allergens
  • Exposure to tobacco smoke
  • Living in a large urban area with increased exposure to environmental air pollutants
  • Family history of asthma, allergic rhinitis (hay fever), hives or eczema
  • Low birth weight
  • Obesity
When to seek medical advice

If you suspect your child may have asthma, it is important that your child be evaluated by a doctor as soon as possible. Make an appointment if you notice:

  • Coughing that's constant, intermittent or associated with physical activity
  • Wheezing or whistling sounds when your child exhales
  • Shortness of breath or rapid breathing that may or may not be associated with exercise
  • Complaints of chest tightness
  • Repeated respiratory infections such as pneumonia or bronchitis

Pay attention to cues from an older child, who may say, "My chest feels funny" or "I'm always coughing." Asthma can be worse at night, so listen for coughing during sleep or coughing that wakes your child in the night. Coughing and wheezing may also accompany crying, laughing, yelling or strong emotional reactions and stress.

Emergency care for an asthma attack
Even if your child hasn't been diagnosed with asthma, seek medical attention immediately if he or she has any trouble breathing. Although episodes of asthma vary in severity, attacks typically start with coughing, which progresses to wheezing and rapid breathing. In the most severe cases, you can see your child's chest and sides pulling inward as he or she struggles to breathe. Increased heart rate, sweating and chest pain also may occur. A severe asthma attack is a medical emergency. Seek emergency care if your child is:

  • Breathing so hard that he or she has to stop in midsentence to catch his or her breath
  • Using abdominal muscles to breathe
  • Widening the nostrils when breathing in
  • Laboring so hard to breathe that the abdomen is sucked under the ribs when he or she breathes in
Screening and diagnosis

Asthma is a very individual condition. Your child's doctor will consider the nature and frequency of symptoms along with results from screening tests to rule out other diseases before diagnosing asthma.

First, the doctor will ask for a detailed description of your child's symptoms and ask about your family history of asthma or allergic diseases such as eczema, hives or hay fever.

In children 6 years of age and older, doctors diagnose asthma with the same tests used to identify the disease in adults. Pulmonary function testing (spirometry), which measures the amount of air inhaled, is key to the diagnosis. Your child may have pulmonary function tests at rest, after exercising and after taking asthma medication. Allergy tests also may be part of the evaluation.

While it is possible for infants and toddlers to have asthma, it may be difficult for your doctor to diagnose because tests aren't accurate before 6 years of age. Some children also simply outgrow asthma-like symptoms — 80 percent of infants with wheezing episodes have no signs of asthma by age 3. Your doctor will rely on detailed information about symptom type and frequency when considering an asthma diagnosis in a young child. Sometimes a diagnosis is not made until later, after months or years of symptom observation.

Complications

Treatment for persistent asthma includes inhaled corticosteroids, which reduce the chronic inflammation in the airways. High doses of these medications have been associated with slightly slowed growth in children, but research has shown that the effect is minor and possibly reversible. Nevertheless, your child's doctor should monitor growth and consider dosage or medication changes if any measurements are concerning.

Treatment

The goal of asthma treatment is to get the asthma under control. Well-controlled asthma means that your child has:

  • Minimal or no symptoms
  • Few or no attacks
  • No limitations on physical activities or exercise
  • Minimal use of fast-acting inhalers
  • Few or no side effects from medications

Treating asthma involves both preventing asthma symptoms and treating an asthma attack in progress. Preventive medications reduce the inflammation in your child's airways that can lead to symptoms. "Relief" medications quickly open airways that are swollen and limiting breathing. If your child has symptoms more than twice a week before starting treatment, the doctor will probably prescribe a combination of long-term anti-inflammatory drugs and a fast-acting bronchodilator.

Anti-inflammatory drugs
The most widely used and effective anti-inflammatory medications for asthma are inhaled corticosteroids, which have a relatively low risk of side effects and reduce the need for additional medications. Inhaled corticosteroids, which are taken every day, include fluticasone (Flovent HFA), beclomethasone (Qvar), budesonide (Pulmicort Turbuhaler) and mometasone (Asmanex). Another anti-inflammatory drug (Advair), combines an inhaled corticosteroid (fluticasone) and a long-acting inhaled bronchodilator (salmeterol). Other long-term control medications are available and might be suitable for your child, such as montelukast (Singulair), zafirlukast (Accolate), theophylline and inhaled cromolyn (Intal).

Bronchodilators
Short-acting bronchodilators — often called "rescue" medications — stop the symptoms of an asthma attack in progress. The most commonly used short-acting beta-2 agonist for asthma is albuterol (Proventil HFA, Ventolin HFA). If you find your child needs to use the bronchodilator more than two times a week, adjustments may need to be made to long-term medications to maintain better control.

For children younger than age 3 who have symptoms of asthma, many times doctors will use a "wait-and-see" approach. This is because the long-term effects of asthma medication on infants and young children are unknown. If an infant or toddler has frequent or severe wheezing episodes, a course of medication may be prescribed to see if the wheezing improves symptoms. Newer delivery devices with face masks make it possible for even infants and toddlers to use metered dose inhalers. Children younger than 2 months, however, usually need to use a nebulizer to take medication for asthma. A nebulizer is a machine that turns liquid medication into fine droplets. Your baby wears a face mask and breathes normally while the nebulizer delivers the correct dosage of medication, converting it to a fine mist for your child to breathe in.

Your child's symptoms and triggers are likely to change over time, so treatment should be evaluated periodically to ensure that the asthma is controlled. The doctor may adjust dosages — up and down — over a period of time before finding the right treatment for your child.

Prevention

Careful planning and steering clear of asthma triggers are the best ways to prevent asthma attacks.

  • Avoid triggers. As much as possible, avoid the allergens and irritants that your child's doctor has identified as asthma triggers.
  • Ban smoking around your child. Exposure to tobacco smoke during infancy is a strong risk factor for childhood asthma, as well as a common trigger of asthma attacks.
  • Encourage your child to be active. As long as your child's asthma is well controlled, regular physical activity can condition the lungs to work more efficiently.
  • Have a plan. Work with your child's doctor to develop an asthma action plan, and make sure all of your child's caregivers — child care providers, teachers, coaches, and the parents of your child's friends — have a copy.
  • Use a peak flow meter. This tool can detect decreases in lung function before your child feels any symptoms, giving you important information on how to treat your child's asthma from day to day.
Coping skills

It can be stressful to manage a chronic condition like asthma in your child. Keep these tips in mind to make life as normal as possible:

  • Encourage normal play and activity. Don't limit your child's activities out of fear of an attack. Work with your doctor until you're confident that the asthma is under control.
  • Make treatment a regular part of life. If your child has to take daily medication, don't make a big deal out of it — it should be as routine as eating breakfast or brushing teeth.
  • Be calm and in control when facing asthma symptoms. Don't get rattled if you see asthma symptoms progressing. Focus on the asthma action plan and involve your child in each step so that he or she understands what's happening.

HIV/AIDS

HIV/AIDS
From MayoClinic.com
Special to Health

Introduction

AIDS is a chronic, life-threatening condition caused by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). By damaging or destroying the cells of your immune system, HIV interferes with your body's ability to effectively fight off viruses, bacteria and fungi that cause disease. This makes you more susceptible to certain types of cancers and to opportunistic infections your body would normally resist, such as pneumonia and meningitis. The virus and the infection itself are known as HIV. The term acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is used to mean the later stages of an HIV infection.

In the 25 years since the first reports of the disease, AIDS has become a global epidemic. Worldwide, an estimated 38.6 million people are living with HIV, nearly half of them women and girls between the ages of 15 and 24. And though the spread of the virus has slowed in some countries, it has escalated or remained steady in others. In 2005, more than 4 million people were newly infected with HIV; 25 million have died of AIDS since the epidemic began.

Despite improved treatments and better access to care for people in the hardest-hit parts of the world, most experts agree that the pandemic is still in the early stages. With a vaccine probably decades away, the best hope for stemming the spread of HIV now lies in prevention, treatment and education.

Signs and symptoms

The symptoms of HIV and AIDS vary, depending on the phase of infection. When first infected with HIV, you may have no symptoms at all, although it's more common to develop a brief flu-like illness two to six weeks after becoming infected. But because the signs and symptoms of an initial infection — which may include fever, headache, sore throat, swollen lymph glands and rash — are similar to those of other diseases, you might not realize you've been infected with HIV.

Even if you don't have symptoms, you're still able to transmit the virus to others. Once the virus enters your body, your own immune system also comes under attack. The virus multiplies in your lymph nodes and slowly begins to destroy your helper T cells (CD4 lymphocytes) — the white blood cells that coordinate your entire immune system.

You may remain symptom-free for eight or nine years or more. But as the virus continues to multiply and destroy immune cells, you may develop mild infections or chronic symptoms such as:

  • Swollen lymph nodes — often one of the first signs of HIV infection
  • Diarrhea
  • Weight loss
  • Fever
  • Cough and shortness of breath

During the last phase of HIV — which occurs approximately 10 or more years after the initial infection — more serious symptoms may begin to appear, and the infection may then meet the official definition of AIDS. In 1993, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) redefined AIDS to mean the presence of HIV infection as shown by a positive HIV-antibody test plus at least one of the following:

  • The development of an opportunistic infection — an infection that occurs when your immune system is impaired — such as Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP)
  • A CD4 lymphocyte count of 200 or less — a normal count ranges from 600 to 1,000

By the time AIDS develops, your immune system has been severely damaged, making you susceptible to opportunistic infections. The signs and symptoms of some of these infections may include:

  • Soaking night sweats
  • Shaking chills or fever higher than 100 F for several weeks
  • Dry cough and shortness of breath
  • Chronic diarrhea
  • Persistent white spots or unusual lesions on your tongue or in your mouth
  • Headaches
  • Blurred and distorted vision
  • Weight loss

You may also begin to experience signs and symptoms of later stage HIV infection itself, such as:

  • Persistent, unexplained fatigue
  • Soaking night sweats
  • Shaking chills or fever higher than 100 F for several weeks
  • Swelling of lymph nodes for more than three months
  • Chronic diarrhea
  • Persistent headaches

If you're infected with HIV, you're also more likely to develop certain cancers, especially Kaposi's sarcoma, cervical cancer and lymphoma, although improved treatments have reduced the risk of these illnesses.

Symptoms of HIV in children
Children who are HIV-positive often fail to gain weight or grow normally. As the disease progresses, they may have difficulty walking or delayed mental development. In addition to being susceptible to the same opportunistic infections that adults are, children may have severe forms of common childhood illnesses such as ear infections (otitis media), pneumonia and tonsillitis.

Causes

Normally, white blood cells and antibodies attack and destroy foreign organisms that enter your body. This response is coordinated by white blood cells known as CD4 lymphocytes. These lymphocytes are also the main targets of HIV, which attaches to the cells and then enters them. Once inside, the virus inserts its own genetic material into the lymphocytes and uses them to make copies of itself.

When the new copies of the virus break out of the host cells and enter the bloodstream, they search for other cells to attack. In the meantime, the old host cells and some uninfected CD4 cells die from the effects of the virus. The cycle repeats itself again and again. In the process, billions of new HIV particles are produced every day. Eventually, the number of CD4 cells in the body decreases, leading to severe immune deficiency, which means your body can no longer effectively fight off viruses and bacteria that cause disease.

How HIV is transmitted
You can become infected with HIV in several ways, including:

  • Sexual transmission. You may become infected if you have vaginal, anal or oral sex with an infected partner whose blood, semen or vaginal secretions enter your body. You can also become infected from shared sexual devices if they're not washed or covered with a condom. The virus is present in the semen or vaginal secretions of someone who's infected and enters your body through small tears that can develop in the rectum or vagina during sexual activity. If you already have another sexually transmitted disease, you're at much greater risk of contracting HIV. Contrary to what researchers once believed, women who use the spermicide nonoxynol-9 also may be at increased risk. This spermicide irritates the lining of the vagina and may cause tears that allow the virus into the body.
  • Transmission through infected blood. In some cases, the virus may be transmitted through blood and blood products that you receive in blood transfusions. This includes whole blood, packed red cells, fresh-frozen plasma and platelets. In 1985, American hospitals and blood banks began screening the blood supply for HIV antibodies. This blood testing, along with improvements in donor screening and recruitment practices, has substantially reduced the risk of acquiring HIV through a transfusion.
  • Transmission through needle sharing. HIV is easily transmitted through needles and syringes contaminated with infected blood. Sharing intravenous drug paraphernalia puts you at high risk of HIV and other infectious diseases such as hepatitis. Your risk is greater if you inject drugs frequently or also engage in high-risk sexual behavior. Avoiding the use of injected drugs is the most reliable way to prevent infection. If that isn't an option, you can reduce your risk by sterilizing injection paraphernalia with household bleach or by participating in a needle exchange program that allows you to trade used needles and syringes for sterile ones.
  • Transmission through accidental needle sticks. Transmission of the virus between HIV-positive people and health care workers through needle sticks is low. Experts put the risk at far less than 1 percent.
  • Transmission from mother to child. Each year, nearly 600,000 infants are infected with HIV, either during pregnancy or delivery or through breast-feeding. The rate of mother-to-child transmission in resource-poor countries is as much as 40 percent higher than it is in the developed world. But if women receive treatment for HIV infection during pregnancy, the risk to their babies is significantly reduced. Combinations of HIV drugs may reduce the risk of mother-to-child transmission even more. In the United States, most pregnant women are pre-screened for HIV, and anti-retroviral drugs are readily available. Not so in developing nations, where women seldom know their HIV status, and treatment is often limited or nonexistent. When medications aren't available, Caesarean section is sometimes recommended instead of vaginal delivery, but this isn't a good option for women in resource-poor countries, where it poses additional risks for both mother and child. Other options, such as vaginal disinfection, haven't proved effective.
  • Other methods of transmission. In rare cases, the virus may be transmitted through organ or tissue transplants or unsterilized dental or surgical equipment.

Ways HIV is not transmitted
To become infected with HIV, infected blood, semen or vaginal secretions must enter your body. You can't become infected through ordinary contact — hugging, dancing or shaking hands — with someone who has HIV or AIDS.

Risk factors

HIV crosses all cultures, national borders and religions. Anyone of any age, race, sex or sexual orientation can be infected, but you're at greatest risk of HIV/AIDS if you:

  • Have unprotected sex with multiple partners. You're at risk whether you're heterosexual, homosexual or bisexual. Unprotected sex means having sex without using a new latex or polyurethane condom every time.
  • Have unprotected sex with someone who is HIV-positive.
  • Have another sexually transmitted disease, such as syphilis, herpes, chlamydia, gonorrhea or bacterial vaginosis.
  • Share needles during intravenous drug use.
  • Have hemophilia and received blood products between 1977 and April 1985 — the date standard testing for HIV began.
  • Received a blood transfusion or blood products before 1985.
  • Have fewer copies of a gene called CCL3L1 that helps fight HIV infection.

Newborns or nursing infants whose mothers tested positive for HIV but did not receive treatment also are at high risk.

When to seek medical advice

If you think you may have been infected with HIV or are at risk of contracting the virus, seek medical counseling as soon as possible. Tests are available that can determine your status. The idea of being tested for HIV infection is frightening for many people, yet a majority of Americans say they would support routine HIV testing for all adults. What's more, testing itself doesn't make you HIV-positive or HIV-negative and is important not only for your own health but also to prevent transmission of the virus to others.

You can be tested by your doctor or at a hospital, the public health department, a Planned Parenthood clinic or other public clinics. Many clinics don't charge for HIV tests. Be sure to choose a place in which you feel comfortable and that offers counseling before and after testing. Don't let concern about what people may think stop you from being tested. For a referral, or to make an appointment for an HIV test at a Planned Parenthood clinic near you, call 800-230-PLAN, or 800-230-7526. You can also contact your local or state health department.

If you're pregnant, you may want to get tested even if you think you're not at risk. If you are HIV-positive, treatment with anti-retroviral drugs during your pregnancy can greatly reduce the chances you'll pass the infection to your baby. And if you engage in a high-risk behavior such as unprotected sex or sharing needles during intravenous drug use, experts recommend that you get tested for HIV every three to six months.

All states and U.S. territories now report positive HIV and AIDS test results to state public health officials to help track the spread of the disease. Most states use name reporting, but the results are released only to the health department and not to anyone else — including the federal government, employers, insurance companies and family members — without your express permission. In addition, legal provisions ensure the highest degree of confidentiality with regard to name-based HIV data. A few states, including Montana and Oregon, use name-to-code reporting. Don't let the HIV reporting policy prevent you from seeking testing or treatment. If you are concerned about having your name reported, many states offer anonymous testing centers. If you do test positive and seek treatment, however, you will likely have to provide your name to your doctor.

Screening and diagnosis

HIV is diagnosed by testing your blood or oral mucus for the presence of antibodies to the virus. The CDC encourages voluntary HIV testing as a routine part of medical care for all adolescents and adults ages 13 to 64, in new recommendations issued in September 2006. Although the CDC says that everyone should be tested at least once, yearly testing is recommended only for people at high risk of infection.

Unfortunately, HIV tests aren't accurate immediately after infection because it takes time for your body to develop these antibodies — usually about 12 weeks. In rare cases, it can take up to six months for an HIV test to become positive.

For years, the only available test for HIV was the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) test that looked for antibodies to the virus in a sample of your blood. If this test was positive — meaning you had antibodies to HIV — the same test was repeated. If the repeat test was also positive for HIV antibodies, you'd then have another confirming blood test called the Western blot test, which checks for the presence of HIV proteins. The Western blot test was important because you may have non-HIV antibodies that cause a false-positive result on the ELISA test. Combining the two types of tests helped ensure that the results were accurate, and you'd receive a diagnosis of HIV only if all three tests were positive.

The downside is that it can take up to two weeks to get the results of the ELISA and Western blot tests, a period of time that can take an emotional toll and that discouraged many people from returning to get their test results. Now, however, several "rapid" tests can give highly accurate information within as little as 20 minutes.

These tests look for antibodies to the virus using a sample of your blood or fluids collected on a treated pad that's rubbed on your upper and lower gums. The oral test is almost as sensitive as the blood test and eliminates the need for drawing blood. A positive reaction on a rapid test requires a confirming blood test. And because the tests are relatively new and were originally approved for use only in certified laboratories, they may not be available in all locations.

Home tests
A quick search of the Internet can turn up dozens of "do-it-yourself" HIV tests even though it's illegal to market most of these tests in the United States. Currently, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved only one HIV test for home use. The Home Access HIV test, marketed by Home Access Health, is as accurate as a clinical test, and all positive results are automatically retested.

Unlike a home pregnancy test, you don't perform the test yourself. Instead, you mail in a drop of your blood, then call a toll-free number to receive your results in three to seven business days. This approach ensures your privacy and anonymity — you're identified only by a code number that comes with your kit. The greatest disadvantage is that you're not offered the counseling that you typically receive in a clinic or doctor's office, although you're given referrals for medical and social services. No matter what type of test you choose, if you test positive for an HIV infection, tell your sexual partner or partners right away so that they can be screened and take steps to protect themselves.

If you receive a diagnosis of HIV/AIDS, your doctor will use a test to help predict the probable progression of your disease. This test measures the amount of virus in your blood (viral load). Studies have shown that people with higher viral loads generally fare more poorly than do those with a lower viral load. Viral load tests are also used to decide when to start and when to change your treatment.

Complications

HIV infection weakens your immune system, making you highly susceptible to a large number of bacterial, viral, fungal and parasitic infections. You may also be vulnerable to certain types of cancers. But treatment with anti-retroviral drugs has markedly decreased the number of opportunistic infections and cancers affecting people with HIV. It's now more likely these infections will occur in people who have not had treatment.

Bacterial infections

  • Bacterial pneumonia. Worldwide, this is one of the most common opportunistic infections occurring in people living with HIV/AIDS. Dozens of types of bacteria can cause bacterial pneumonia, which may develop on its own or after you've had an upper respiratory infection such as a cold or the flu.
  • Mycobacterium aviumcomplex (MAC). This infection is caused by a group of bacteria referred to by a single name — MAC. The bacteria normally cause an infection of the respiratory tract. But if you have advanced HIV infection and your CD4 lymphocyte count is less than 50, you're more likely to develop a systemic infection that can affect almost any internal organ, including your bone marrow, liver or spleen. MAC causes nonspecific symptoms such as fever, night sweats, weight loss, stomach pain and diarrhea.
  • Tuberculosis (TB). In resource-poor nations, TB is the most common opportunistic infection associated with HIV and a leading cause of death among people living with AIDS. Millions of people are currently infected with both HIV and tuberculosis, and many experts consider the two diseases twin epidemics. That's because HIV/AIDS and TB have a deadly symbiotic relationship, in which each fuels the progress of the other. Having HIV makes you more susceptible to TB and far more likely to progress from dormant to active infection. At the same time, TB increases the rate at which the AIDS virus replicates. What's more, TB often strikes people with HIV years before other problems associated with HIV develop. One of the first indications of HIV infection may be the sudden onset of TB — often in a site outside the lungs. Currently, someone in the world develops TB every second and 5,000 to 6,000 people die of the disease each day.

    If you're HIV-positive, you should have a simple skin test for TB early in your medical care. If the test is positive, you'll also need a chest X-ray and other appropriate tests to make sure you don't have an active infection. If your TB isn't active, there are treatments to prevent it from becoming active in the future. TB is more worrisome than many other opportunistic infections because it's highly contagious. You can get TB when someone with the disease coughs or sneezes near you. The bacteria then spread through your blood and lymph nodes to the rest of your body. TB most often affects the lungs, but people with HIV are more likely to have infection at other sites. Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB), in which the disease resists treatment with traditional antibiotics, is of particular concern to people with HIV/AIDS. Ultimately, however, TB is of concern to everyone because it can affect even people with healthy immune systems.

  • Salmonellosis. You contract this bacterial infection from contaminated food or water. Symptoms include severe diarrhea, fever, chills, abdominal pain and, occasionally, vomiting. Although anyone exposed to salmonella bacteria can become sick, salmonellosis is far more common in people who are HIV-positive. You can reduce your risk by washing your hands carefully after handling food and animals and by cooking meat and eggs thoroughly.
  • Bacillary angiomatosis. Rarely seen in people not infected with HIV, this infection first appears as purplish to bright red patches on your skin. It often resembles Kaposi's sarcoma, but it can cause disease in other parts of your body, including your liver and spleen.

Viral infections

  • Cytomegalovirus (CMV). This common herpesvirus is transmitted in body fluids such as saliva, blood, urine, semen and breast milk. More than half the adult population has been infected. But a healthy immune system inactivates the virus, and it remains dormant in your body. If your immune system weakens, the virus resurfaces, causing damage to your eyes, digestive tract, lungs or other organs. Most commonly, CMV causes infection and inflammation of your retina (CMV retinitis). If not treated, CMV retinitis can lead to blindness.
  • Viral hepatitis. Viral hepatitis is a viral infection of the liver. Signs and symptoms include yellowing of your skin and the whites of your eyes (jaundice), fatigue, nausea, abdominal pain, loss of appetite and diarrhea. There are several types of viral hepatitis, but the most common are hepatitis A, B and C. Hepatitis B and C can lead to persistent or chronic infection and put you at risk of long-term complications such as cirrhosis or liver cancer. If you are HIV-positive and also have hepatitis, you may be more likely to develop liver toxicity from your medications.
  • Herpes simplex virus (HSV). HSV, which usually causes genital herpes, may be transmitted during unprotected anal or vaginal sex. Initial symptoms include pain or irritated skin in the genital area. Later, sores that ooze and bleed erupt on the genitals, buttocks and anus. Although these sores eventually heal, the virus periodically reappears, causing the same symptoms. If you have HIV, your skin infection is likely to be more severe than it would be in people who don't have HIV, and the sores may take longer to heal. Systemic symptoms may also be more severe. Although the herpes virus isn't life-threatening in adults, it may cause brain damage, blindness or death in infants infected during delivery.
  • Human papillomavirus (HPV). This is one of the most common causes of sexually transmitted disease. Some types of this virus cause common warts; others cause warts on the genitals. If you're HIV-positive, you're especially susceptible to infection with HPV and more prone to recurrent infections. HPV infection is especially serious because it significantly increases a woman's risk of cervical cancer. Infection with both HPV and HIV increases a woman's risk even further — cervical cancer seems to occur more often and more aggressively in women who are HIV-positive. In 2006, the Food and Drug Administration approved the first vaccine to offer protection from the most dangerous types of HPV. The vaccine is most effective when given to girls before they become sexually active, but it also provides protection for sexually active women age 26 and younger. If you are not a candidate for the vaccine, are HIV-positive or have unprotected sex with more than one partner, you should have a Pap test — a test that examines cells taken from the cervix — every year to check for cervical cancer, HPV and other sexually transmitted diseases. Anyone who engages in anal sex should be tested for anal cancer because HPV increases the risk of this type of cancer in both men and women.
  • Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML). PML is an extremely serious brain infection caused by the human polyomavirus JCV. Signs and symptoms vary and may include speech problems, weakness on one side of the body, loss of vision in one eye or numbness in one arm or leg. PML usually occurs only when your immune system has been severely damaged.

Fungal infections

  • Candidiasis. Candidiasis is a common HIV-related infection. It causes inflammation and a thick white coating on the mucous membranes of your mouth, tongue (thrush), esophagus (Candida esophagitis) or vagina. Children may have especially severe symptoms in the mouth or esophagus, which can make eating painful and difficult.
  • Cryptococcal meningitis. Meningitis is an inflammation of the membranes and fluid surrounding your brain and spinal cord (meninges). Cryptococcal meningitis, the most common central nervous system infection associated with HIV, is caused by a fungus that is present in soil. Symptoms include headache, high fever, a stiff neck and sensitivity to light. Cryptococcal meningitis can be successfully treated with antifungal medications, but early treatment is essential. Meningitis is a serious disease that can cause severe complications or prove fatal in a short period of time. Once you've had cryptococcal meningitis, you'll need to be on long-term medication to prevent a recurrence.

Parasitic infections

  • Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP). Although antiretroviral drugs have helped reduce the number of cases of PCP, it remains one of the most common opportunistic infections affecting people with AIDS in the United States. PCP attacks the lungs, making it difficult to breathe. Symptoms include a cough that doesn't go away, fever and trouble breathing.
  • Toxoplasmosis. This potentially deadly infection is caused by Toxoplasma gondii, a parasite spread primarily by cats. Infected cats pass the parasites in their stools, and the parasites may then spread to other animals. Humans generally contract toxoplasmosis by touching their mouths with their hands after changing cat litter or by eating raw or undercooked meat, especially pork, lamb and venison. If you become infected with the parasites while pregnant, you may pass the infection to your baby. Once you're infected, the parasites can spread to every organ in your body, including your heart, eyes and lungs. For many people with AIDS, toxoplasmosis leads to encephalitis, an infection of the brain. Signs and symptoms may include disorientation, seizures and difficulty walking or speaking.
  • Cryptosporidiosis. This infection is caused by an intestinal parasite that's commonly found in animals. You contract cryptosporidiosis when you ingest contaminated food or water. The parasite grows in your intestines and bile ducts, leading to severe, chronic diarrhea in people with AIDS.

Cancers

  • Kaposi's sarcoma. Kaposi's sarcoma is a tumor of the blood vessel walls. Although rare in people not infected with HIV, it's common in HIV-positive people. Kaposi's sarcoma usually appears as pink, red or purple lesions on the skin and mouth. In people with darker skin, the lesions may look dark brown or black. Kaposi's sarcoma can also affect the internal organs, including the digestive tract and lungs. Researchers are testing new combinations of the chemotherapy drugs currently used to treat Kaposi's sarcoma as well as new ways of delivering those medications. What's more, as with most opportunistic infections associated with AIDS, the use of anti-retrovirals has reduced the incidence of this cancer and has even reduced the lesions in people already affected.
  • Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. This cancer originates in lymphocytes, a type of white blood cell. Lymphocytes are concentrated in your bone marrow, lymph nodes, spleen, digestive tract and skin. Although lymphomas can start in other organs, they usually begin in your lymph nodes. The most common early sign is painless swelling of the lymph nodes in your neck, armpit or groin.

Other complications

  • Wasting syndrome. Researchers identified wasting syndrome as a complication of AIDS in the 1980s. Although current aggressive treatment regimens have reduced the number of cases, wasting syndrome still affects many people with AIDS. It is defined as a loss of at least 10 percent of body weight and is often accompanied by diarrhea, chronic weakness and fever.
  • Neurological complications. Although AIDS doesn't appear to infect the nerve cells, it can still cause neurological symptoms such as confusion, forgetfulness, changes in behavior, depression, anxiety and trouble walking. One of the most common neurological complications is AIDS dementia complex, which leads to behavioral changes and diminished mental functioning. It's best treated with aggressive anti-retroviral medications.
Treatment

When HIV was first identified in the early 1980s, there were few drugs to treat the virus and the opportunistic infections associated with it. Since then, a number of medications have been developed to treat both HIV/AIDS and opportunistic infections. For many people, including children, these treatments have extended and improved the quality of life. Scientists at the National Institutes of Health estimate that since 1989, anti-retroviral medications have provided HIV-positive Americans with 3 million years of extended life. But none of these drugs can cure HIV/AIDS, many have side effects that can be severe, and most are expensive. What's more, after 20 years on AIDS drugs, some people — about 40,000 in the United States alone — develop resistance to the drugs and no longer respond to treatment. The new protease inhibitor darunavir is intended to help this group of people.

Treatment guidelines
A panel of leading AIDS specialists has developed recommendations for the use of anti-retroviral medications in people with HIV. These recommendations are based on the best information available at the time they were developed. AIDSinfo, a program of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, has a program in place to regularly refine and update the recommendations as knowledge about HIV infection evolves.

According to current guidelines, treatment should focus on achieving the maximum suppression of symptoms for as long as possible. This aggressive approach is known as highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART). The aim of HAART is to reduce the amount of virus in your blood to very low, or even nondetectable, levels, although this doesn't mean the virus is gone. This is usually accomplished with a combination of three or more drugs.

But the treatment guidelines also emphasize the importance of quality of life. Thus the goal of AIDS treatment is to find the strongest possible regimen that is also simple and has the fewest side effects. If you have HIV/AIDS, it's important that you take an active role in every treatment decision. You and your doctor should discuss the risks and benefits of all therapies so that you can make an informed decision about what will likely be a complex and long-term treatment.

Antiretroviral drugs
Antiretroviral drugs inhibit the growth and replication of HIV at various stages of its life cycle. Five classes of these drugs are available:

  • Nucleoside analogue reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs). NRTIs were the first antiretroviral drugs to be developed. They inhibit the replication of an HIV enzyme called reverse transcriptase. They include zidovudine (Retrovir), lamivudine (Epivir) didanosine (Videx), zalcitabine (Hivid), stavudine (Zerit) and abacavir (Ziagen). A newer drug, emtricitabine (Emtriva), which must be used in combination with at least two other AIDS medications, treats both HIV and hepatitis B.

    The major side effect of zidovudine is bone marrow suppression, which causes a decrease in the number of red and white blood cells. Approximately 5 percent of people treated with abacavir experience hypersensitivity reactions such as a rash along with fever, fatigue, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and abdominal pain. Hypersensitivity reactions can also occur without a rash. In either case, symptoms usually appear within the first six weeks of treatment and generally disappear when the drug is discontinued. If you've had a hypersensitivity reaction to abacavir, avoid taking the drug again. Side effects of emtricitabine include nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, difficulty breathing and fatigue.

  • Protease inhibitors (PIs). PIs interrupt HIV replication at a later stage in its life cycle by interfering with an enzyme known as HIV protease. This causes HIV particles in your body to become structurally disorganized and noninfectious. Among these drugs are saquinavir (Invirase), ritonavir (Norvir), indinavir (Crixivan), nelfinavir (Viracept), amprenavir (Agenerase), lopinavir, atazanavir (Reyataz) and tipranavir (Aptivus). Darunavir (Prezista), a protease inhibitor approved in 2006, is intended for people who haven't responded to treatment with other drugs. Darunavir is used in conjunction with ritonavir and other anti-HIV medications.

    The most common side effects of protease inhibitors include nausea, diarrhea and other digestive tract problems. PIs can also cause a significant number of side effects when they interact with certain other medications you may be taking. That's because all PIs, to one degree or another, affect an enzyme system in your liver that is responsible for metabolizing a large number of drugs. Newer side effects have also appeared with the continuing and widespread use of protease inhibitors. These include elevated triglyceride levels and problems with sugar metabolism that may sometimes progress to diabetes.

    There may also be abnormalities in the way fat is metabolized and deposited in your body. Some people lose much of their total body fat; others gain excess fat on the back between their shoulders (buffalo hump) or in the stomach (protease paunch). No one knows exactly why these abnormalities occur. In fact, it's not even certain whether these problems are a direct result of treatment with protease inhibitors or due to some other cause that has yet to be identified. Similar metabolic abnormalities have occurred in people on anti-retroviral therapy that doesn't include PIs. Although these body changes can be distressing, the possibility they may occur should not stop you from obtaining treatment for HIV/AIDS.

  • Non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs). These drugs bind directly to the enzyme reverse transcriptase. Three NNRTIs are approved for clinical use: nevirapine (Viramune), delavirdine (Rescriptor) and efavirenz(Sustiva). A majorside effect of all NNRTIs is a rash. In addition, people taking efavirenz may have side effects such as abnormal dreams, sleeplessness, dizziness and difficulty concentrating.
  • Nucleotide reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NtRTIs). NtRTIs work much like nucleoside analogs: They interfere with the replication of reverse transcriptase and prevent the virus from inserting its genetic material into cells. But NtRTIs act more quickly than NRTIs do. The only approved drug in this class, tenofovir (Viread), inhibits both HIV and hepatitis B and appears to be effective in people who are resistant to NRTIs. The most common side effects of tenofovir, when used in combination with other antiretrovirals, are nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and gas. As with all reverse transcriptase inhibitors, the possibility of severe, and even fatal, liver damage exists.
  • Fusion inhibitors. One of the most alarming developments in the AIDS epidemic is the emergence of drug-resistant strains of HIV. Worldwide, a majority of people receiving treatment for HIV are resistant to at least one drug, and many don't respond to a typical three-drug combination. But a drug called enfuvirtide (Fuzeon), the first in a new class of drugs called fusion inhibitors, appears to suppress resistant strains of HIV. Fusion inhibitors stop the virus from replicating by preventing its membrane from fusing with the membrane surrounding healthy cells. Fuzeon is used in combination with other HIV drugs for people who have advanced infection and who have developed resistance to other drugs. Doctors administer Fuzeon by injection.

Your response to any treatment is measured by the levels of HIV in your blood (viral load). These levels should be tested at the start of treatment and then every three to four months while you're on therapy. In some cases you may be tested even more often.

New treatments
Many new drugs for HIV- or AIDS-related infections are in development or being tested in clinical trials. Among them are a drug that attacks the virus in the last stage of its life cycle and a pill that prevents the virus from entering cells, which researchers hope will avoid some of the toxic side effects of existing drugs. Although these medications are not yet licensed, some may be available by compassionate exception to people who need them.

Experts predict that an AIDS vaccine probably won't be found soon. More promising is the search for a microbicide to protect women from HIV infection during sex. Although microbicides may never be as effective as condoms, which offer nearly 100 percent protection when used properly, a microbicide could still save millions of lives.

For more information on new therapies, call AIDSinfo at 800-TRIALS-A, or 800-874-2572.

Prevention

There's no vaccine to prevent HIV infection and no cure for AIDS. But it's possible to protect yourself and others from infection. That means educating yourself about HIV and avoiding any behavior that allows HIV-infected fluids — blood, semen, vaginal secretions and breast milk — into your body.

If you're HIV-negative
The following measures can help keep you from being infected with HIV:

  • Educate yourself and others. Make sure you understand what HIV is and how the virus is transmitted. Just as important, teach your children about HIV.
  • Know the HIV status of any sexual partner. Don't engage in unprotected sex unless you're absolutely certain your partner isn't infected with HIV.
  • Use a new latex or polyurethane condom every time you have sex. If you don't know the HIV status of your partner, use a new latex condom every time you have anal or vaginal sex. If you're allergic to latex, use a plastic (polyurethane) condom. Avoid lambskin condoms — they do not protect you from HIV. If you don't have a male condom, use a female condom. Use only water-based lubricants, not petroleum jelly, cold cream or oils. Oil-based lubricants can weaken condoms and cause them to break. During oral sex use a condom,dental dam — a piece of medical-grade latex —or plastic wrap. Remember that although condoms can reduce your risk of contracting HIV, they don't eliminate the risk entirely. Condoms can break or develop small tears, and they may not always be used properly.
  • Consider male circumcision. A large study in 2006 by the National Institutes of Health showed that medically performed circumcision significantly reduced a man's risk of acquiring HIV through heterosexual intercourse. The study, conducted in Kenya, showed a 53 percent reduction of HIV infection in circumcised HIV-negative men compared with uncircumcised men in the study. The outcome was heralded by the NIH as good news not only because it reduced the number of HIV-infected men, but also because it could lead to fewer infections among women in areas of the world where HIV is spread primarily through heterosexual intercourse.
  • Use a clean needle. If you use a needle to inject drugs, make sure it's sterile, and don't share it. Take advantage of needle exchange programs in your community and consider seeking help for your drug use.
  • Be cautious about blood products in certain countries. Although the blood supply in the United States is now well screened, this isn't always the case in other countries. If an emergency requires that you receive blood or blood products in another country, get tested for HIV as soon as you return home.
  • Get regular screening tests. If you are a woman, have a yearly Pap test. Men and women who engage in anal sex should also have regular tests for anal cancer.
  • Don't become complacent. Because potent antiretroviral medications have reduced the number of AIDS deaths in the United States, you may think that HIV infection is no longer a problem. But HIV/AIDS is still a terminal illness for which there is no vaccine and no cure. Right now, the only way to stay healthy is to protect yourself and others from infection.

If you're HIV-positive
If you've received a diagnosis of HIV/AIDS, the following guidelines can help protect others:

  • Follow safe sex practices. The only foolproof way to protect others from infection is to avoid practices that expose them to blood, semen or vaginal secretions. Barring that, carefully follow guidelines for safe sex, including using a new latex condom every time you have vaginal or anal sex and using a dental dam, condom or piece of plastic wrap during oral sex. If you use sexual devices, don't share them. It's also important to avoid having unprotected sex with other HIV-positive people because of the risk of acquiring or passing on a drug-resistant strain of the virus.
  • Tell your sexual partner(s) you have HIV. It's important to tell anyone with whom you've had sex that you're HIV-positive. Your partners need to be tested and to receive medical care if they have the virus. They also need to know their HIV status so that they don't infect others.
  • If your partner is pregnant, tell her you have HIV. Even if you're not the father, be sure to tell any pregnant woman with whom you've had sex that you're HIV-positive. She needs to receive treatment to protect her own health and that of her baby.
  • Tell others who need to know. Although only you can decide whether to tell friends and family about your illness, you do need to inform your health care providers of your HIV status. This is not just to protect them, but also to ensure that you get the best possible medical care.
  • Don't share needles or syringes. If you use intravenous drugs, never share your needles and syringes.
  • Don't donate blood or organs. The virus will spread to other people.
  • Don't share razor blades or toothbrushes. These items may carry traces of HIV-infected blood.
  • If you're pregnant, get medical care right away. If you're HIV-positive, you may pass the infection to your baby. But if you receive treatment during pregnancy, you can cut your baby's risk by as much as two-thirds.
Self-care

Although it's important to receive medical treatment for HIV/AIDS, it's also essential to take an active role in your own care. The following suggestions may help you stay healthy longer:

  • Make sure your doctor knows how to treat HIV. Find someone who understands all the ramifications of the disease. You'll also want a doctor who is willing to work with you and who makes you feel comfortable and respected.
  • Follow your doctor's instructions. Keep all of your appointments, and take your medications exactly as directed. Many treatment regimens are much simpler now than in the past — some requiring as few as one pill a day. Even so, sticking with treatment can be difficult. If you get sick from your medication, call your doctor. Don't stop taking your medication or change the dosage on your own.
  • Get immunizations. These may prevent infections such as pneumonia and the flu.
  • Don't smoke or use illegal drugs. These weaken your body even more.
  • Eat the healthiest diet you can. Emphasize fresh fruits and vegetables, whole grains and lean protein. Healthy foods help keep you strong, give you more energy and support your immune system. Unfortunately, you may not always feel like eating when you have HIV. But good nutrition is tremendously important. A registered dietitian can be especially helpful if you have diarrhea, weight loss or trouble eating. Also, because your nutritional needs are extremely high and you may not digest food well, talk to your doctor about vitamin and mineral supplements.
  • Avoid foods that may put you at risk of infection. These include unpasteurized dairy products, raw eggs and raw seafood such as oysters, sushi or sashimi. Cook meat until it's well-done or until there's no trace of pink color.
  • Drink pure water. The Department of Health and Human Services recommends that you boil tap water or use bottled or filtered water for drinking. If you buy a water filter, look for one that uses reverse osmosis as part of the purification process.
  • Get regular exercise. Exercise helps increase your strength and energy levels and can help battle the depression that's often a part of dealing with HIV/AIDS.
  • Get enough sleep. Rest when you need to.
  • Take care with companion animals. Some animals may carry parasites that can cause infections in people who are HIV-positive. But that doesn't mean you should give up your companion animal. You can protect yourself by having someone else clean your cat's litter box or pick up after your dog. If you must do these chores yourself, wear latex gloves and wash your hands immediately afterward. Don't feed your pets raw meat, and make sure they have all their shots. Always wash your hands thoroughly with soap and water after petting or playing with your animals.
  • Find ways to relax. This might mean anything from yoga or meditation to walking, reading, playing chess or computer games, or listening to music.
  • Keep your hands clean. Wash your hands thoroughly with soap and water after using the restroom, before eating or preparing food, and after spending time in public places. You might find it helpful to carry an alcohol-based hand sanitizer with you for times when it's not convenient to use soap and water.
Coping skills

Receiving a diagnosis of any life-threatening illness is devastating. But the emotional, social and financial consequences of HIV/AIDS can make coping with this illness especially difficult — not only for you but also for those closest to you.

Fortunately, a wide range of services and resources are available to people with HIV. Most HIV/AIDS clinics have social workers, counselors or nurses who can help you with problems directly or put you in touch with people who can. All have experience with HIV and are there to help you with the large part of your life that lies beyond medicine. They can arrange for transportation to and from doctor appointments, help with housing and child care, deal with employment and legal issues, and see you through financial emergencies.

Treatment for HIV presents its own problems. The regimens are sometimes complicated and side effects can be severe. Furthermore, the physical effects of treatment can create difficulties in other areas of your life. You may have a hard time explaining to your employer why you're sick so often or have so many doctor visits, for example. You also may not be able to participate in life as fully as you'd like.

Some of the following suggestions may help you deal with the emotional toll of living with HIV/AIDS:

  • Learn all you can about HIV/AIDS. Find out how the disease progresses, your prognosis and your treatment options, including both experimental and standard treatments and their side effects. The more you know, the more active you can be in your own care.
  • Be proactive. Although you may often feel tired and discouraged, don't let others — including your family or your doctor — make important decisions for you. It's vital that you take an active role in your treatment.
  • Maintain a strong support system. Strong relationships are crucial in dealing with life-threatening illnesses. Although friends and family can be your best allies, in some cases they may have trouble dealing with your illness. If so, an HIV counselor, other people who are HIV-positive, or a formal support group may be especially helpful.
  • Take time to make important decisions. One intense struggle you'll likely face is how much to reveal about your illness. When your disease is first diagnosed, you may not want anyone to know. But HIV/AIDS is a terrible burden to carry alone. Like many people, you may eventually decide that it's important for your emotional well-being to confide in someone you trust. The choice is up to you. You need to tell your current and former sexual partners and your health care providers. Beyond that, there is no legal obligation for you to reveal your HIV status, even to your employer. In fact, the law guarantees your right to privacy.
  • Come to terms with your illness. Coming to terms with your illness may be the hardest thing you've ever done. For some people, having a strong faith or a sense of something greater than themselves makes this process easier. Others seek counseling from someone who understands HIV/AIDS. Still others make a conscious decision to experience their lives as fully and intensely as they can or to help other people who have the disease. A vast support network is available for people with HIV infection.
Vaginal cancer
From MayoClinic.com
Special to Health

Introduction

Vaginal cancer is a rare cancer that occurs in the vagina — the muscular tube that connects the uterus with the outer genitals. Vaginal cancer most commonly occurs in the cells that line the surface of the vagina, which is sometimes called the birth canal.

Vaginal cancer most commonly affects women older than 60. However, vaginal cancer can occur at any age.

While several cancers can spread to the vagina from other places in the body, cancer that begins in the vagina (primary vaginal cancer) is rare. Vaginal cancer comprises only 1 percent to 3 percent of gynecologic cancers. About 2,400 women are diagnosed with vaginal cancer each year in the United States, according to the American Cancer Society.

Women with early-stage vaginal cancer have the best chance for a cure. Vaginal cancer that spreads beyond the vagina is much more difficult to treat.

Signs and symptoms

Early vaginal cancer may not have any signs and symptoms. As it progresses, vaginal cancer may cause signs and symptoms such as:

  • Unusual vaginal bleeding, such as after intercourse or after menopause
  • Watery vaginal discharge that may be bloody and foul-smelling
  • Lump or mass in the vagina
  • Frequent urination
  • Blood in urine
  • Constipation
  • Pelvic pain
Causes

In general, cancer begins when healthy cells acquire a genetic mutation that turns normal cells into abnormal cells. Healthy cells grow and multiply at a set rate, eventually dying at a set time. Cancer cells grow and multiply out of control, and they don't die. The accumulating abnormal cells form a mass (tumor). Cancer cells invade nearby tissues and can break off from an initial tumor to spread elsewhere in the body (metastasize).

It isn't clear what causes the genetic mutation that leads to vaginal cancer. Researchers have identified factors that may increase your risk of vaginal cancer.

The majority of vaginal cancers begin in the squamous cells. These thin, flat cells line the surface of the vagina. Other less common types of vaginal cancer include:

  • Vaginal adenocarcinoma, which begins in the glandular cells on the surface of the vagina
  • Vaginal melanoma, which develops in the pigment-producing cells (melanocytes) of the vagina
  • Vaginal sarcoma, which develops in the connective tissue cells or smooth muscles cells in the walls of the vagina
Risk factors

Certain factors may raise your risk of vaginal cancer, including:

  • Atypical cells in the vagina. Women with vaginal intraepithelial neoplasia (VAIN) have an increased risk of vaginal cancer. In women with VAIN, cells in the vagina appear different from normal cells, but not different enough to be considered cancer. A small number of women with VAIN will eventually develop vaginal cancer, though doctors aren't sure what causes some cases to develop into cancer and other cases to remain benign.
  • Exposure to miscarriage prevention drug. Women whose mothers took a drug called diethylstilbestrol (DES) while pregnant may have an increased risk of a certain type of vaginal cancer called clear cell adenocarcinoma. DES was used in the 1950s to prevent miscarriage in early pregnancy.
  • Human papillomavirus (HPV). HPV is a sexually transmitted virus that can increase the risk of vaginal cancer and other cancers. HPV causes the majority of cervical cancers and precancerous changes in the cervix. Even if you've had your uterus and ovaries removed (hysterectomy), you may still have an increased risk of vaginal cancer if you have HPV. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved a vaccine to prevent HPV in 2006.
  • Previous gynecologic cancer. Women who've been treated for a different gynecologic cancer, especially cervical cancer, may have an increased risk of vaginal cancer.

Other risk factors that have been linked to an increased risk of vaginal cancer include:

  • Multiple sexual partners
  • Early age at first intercourse
  • Smoking
When to seek medical advice

See your doctor if you have any unusual signs and symptoms, such as abnormal vaginal bleeding. Vaginal cancer is more easily treated when discovered at an early stage. Since vaginal cancer doesn't always cause signs and symptoms, follow your doctor's recommendations about when you should have routine pelvic exams.

Screening and diagnosis

Screening
While there is no general screening test for vaginal cancer, it is sometimes detected during a routine pelvic exam before any signs and symptoms become evident. During a pelvic exam, your doctor carefully inspects the outer part of your vagina, and then inserts two fingers of one hand into your vagina and simultaneously presses the other hand on your abdomen to feel your uterus and ovaries. He or she also inserts a device called a speculum into your vagina. The speculum widens your vagina so that your doctor can check your vagina and cervix for abnormalities.

Your doctor usually also conducts a pap test to screen for cervical cancer, but sometimes vaginal cancer cells can be detected on a pap test. Pap tests and pelvic exams are generally recommended every three years. How often you undergo these screenings depends on your risk factors for cancer and whether you've had abnormal pap tests in the past. Talk to your doctor about whether you should have this health screening.

Diagnosis
Based on any signs and symptoms you have, your doctor may conduct a pelvic exam and pap test to check for abnormalities that may indicate vaginal cancer. Based on those findings, your doctor may conduct other procedures to determine whether you have vaginal cancer, such as:

  • Colposcopy. Colposcopy is an examination of your vagina with a special lighted microscope called a colposcope. Colposcopy allows your doctor to magnify the surface of your vagina to see any areas of abnormal cells.
  • Biopsy. Biopsy is a procedure to remove a sample of suspicious tissue to test for cancer cells. Your doctor may take a biopsy of tissue during a colposcopy exam. Your doctor sends the tissue sample to a laboratory for testing.

Staging
Once your doctor diagnoses vaginal cancer, he or she takes steps to determine the extent of the cancer — a process called staging. The stage of your cancer helps your doctor decide what treatments are appropriate for you. In order to determine the stage of your cancer, your doctor may use:

  • Biopsy. Tissue samples from your cervix or vulva may show whether cancer has spread to those areas.
  • Imaging tests. Your doctor may order imaging tests to determine whether cancer has spread. Imaging tests may include X-rays, computerized tomography (CT) scans or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).
  • Tiny cameras to see inside your body. Procedures that use tiny cameras to see inside your body may help your doctor determine if cancer has spread to certain areas. Cameras help your doctor see inside your bladder (cystoscopy) and your rectum (proctoscopy).

Once your doctor determines the extent of your cancer, he or she assigns your cancer a stage. The stages of vaginal cancer are:

  • Stage I. Cancer is limited to the vaginal wall.
  • Stage II. Cancer has spread to tissue next to the vagina.
  • Stage III. Cancer has spread to nearby lymph nodes, or to the pelvic wall or both.
  • Stage IVA. Cancer has spread to nearby lymph nodes, and has also spread to bladder, rectum or pelvis.
  • Stage IVB. Cancer has spread to areas away from the vagina, such as the lungs.
Alzheimer's: Balancing needs of caregiver and loved one
From MayoClinic.com
Special to Health

As an Alzheimer's caregiver, you may feel as if you're riding a roller coaster — never sure of what the next curve may bring. It's incredibly stressful; yet it can also be rewarding.

Rocked by this dizzying mix of emotions, you walk a tightrope, balancing your own needs against those of your loved one. Learning to recognize and defuse stress can make it easier to keep your balance. Focusing on the rewards from your efforts also helps.

The rewards of caregiving

"Two of the main things I hear people talk about are feelings of satisfaction in making good on a commitment and in paying back loved ones," says Glenn Smith, Ph.D., a neuropsychologist at Mayo Clinic,Rochester, Minn.

Another reward Dr. Smith notes is a sense of accomplishment. "People often express that they realize they are stronger than they ever thought they could be," he says.

The benefits of caring for someone with Alzheimer's disease won't always be obvious to you. That's normal.

"It's important that people don't try to deny the grief that they may feel," says Dr. Smith. "To work through that grief is part of the growth a person can experience."

According to Dr. Smith, some of the ways in which you can address your grief — and still reap rewards — include:

  • Accept your grief and understand it as a normal process.
  • Set realistic goals and recognize that at some point you may not be able to continue to provide total care.
  • Take stock of what you have accomplished and the goals you have met.
Are you a 'hidden patient'?

Caring for someone with Alzheimer's can be all-consuming. The stress of caregiving makes you more likely to become ill or depressed. This is especially true if you're older or if you don't get enough help. Even in situations when friends and family are able to help, many caregivers insist on doing everything themselves. Doctors often think of such caregivers as hidden patients.

Common signs of caregiver stress include:

  • Depressed mood
  • Frequent crying
  • Decrease in energy
  • Sleeping too little or too much
  • Unintended weight gain or loss
  • Increased irritability and anger
Taking care of yourself

If you're like a lot of people, you probably take better care of your car than you do yourself. Eating healthy foods, getting enough sleep and staying in touch with friends are just routine maintenance for the average person.

When you're stressed, you need to take even better care of yourself. Schedule times when you can take regular breaks. Maybe a friend can spend time with your loved one, reading a book aloud or watching a movie together, while you get out of the house. Or you might place your loved one in elder care two or three days a week.

Where can you find help?

The National Eldercare Locator can link you to local organizations that provide services to seniors. This site is especially useful for family members who may live some distance from the person with Alzheimer's. All you need is a ZIP code to find the services for that region.

A service of the Administration on Aging, the Eldercare Locator can be accessed via the Internet or by phone. The toll-free number, (800) 677-1116, has operators available Monday through Friday, from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Eastern time.

Area Agency on Aging (AAA) offices can be found through the Eldercare Locator or in the phone book, under "Aging" or "Social Services."

In addition to senior centers, subsidized housing and adult day care services, AAAs also offer a wealth of in-home services, including:

  • Meals-On-Wheels
  • Homemakers, who help with such tasks as grocery shopping and housekeeping
  • Chore Services, which include minor home repairs and yardwork
  • Personal Care Services, which assist with bathing and feeding
  • Respite Care, to provide a short break for caregivers

The Alzheimer's Association offers a wide variety of programs, educational materials and support services. Most communities have a regional chapter of the organization, which sponsors local support group meetings.

The Alzheimer's Association also provides:

  • A 24-hour, toll-free Contact Center (800) 272-3900 that links callers to information about the disease, treatments, care strategies and community programs.
  • The nation's largest Alzheimer's library, containing more than 5,000 books, journals, audiocassettes, videotapes and CD-ROMs. After browsing the online catalog, you can arrange for interlibrary loans through your local library.
  • The Safe Return program, which helps families locate loved ones who have wandered off. More than 100,000 individuals with Alzheimer's have been registered in the program nationwide.
A heartbreaking journey

Watching a loved one travel through the stages of Alzheimer's is heartbreaking. Caring for them during this time is one of the hardest jobs imaginable. It requires an abundance of physical and emotional energy. Accepting help and taking care of yourself are crucial to success.

TEHRAN, Iran (Reuters) -- Iran has no brake and no reverse gear in its nuclear program, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on Sunday, while a deputy foreign minister vowed Tehran was prepared for any eventuality, "even for war."

The tough talk comes ahead of a meeting this week of officials from the U.N. Security Council plus Germany in London to consider possible further steps after limited sanctions were imposed on Tehran in December.

"Iran has obtained the technology to produce nuclear fuel and Iran's move is like a train ... which has no brake and no reverse gear," Ahmadinejad said, ISNA news agency reported.

The United States repeated its call for Iran to halt uranium enrichment, a process Washington believes Tehran is seeking to master in order to build atomic bombs.

Iran, which insists its only wants to make fuel to generate electricity, ignored last week's U.N. deadline to stop the work.

"They don't need a reverse gear. They need a stop button," U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice told Fox News. She said her offer to meet Iran's foreign minister or other Iranian representatives still stood if Iran suspended enrichment.

The United States insists it wants a diplomatic solution to the row but has not ruled out military action if that fails.

U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney said on Saturday Iran's atomic ambitions must be curbed and said "all options" were on the table. Iran says Washington is in no position to attack when its troops are bogged down in Iraq but says it is ready in case.

'Resolving differences'

"We have prepared ourselves for any situation, even for war," Manouchehr Mohammadi, one of the foreign minister's deputies, was quoted by ISNA as saying.

Iranian military commanders have said recent war games, the latest of which involved testing several missiles, show Iran's readiness to counter any attack.

Iran's chief nuclear negotiator Ali Larijani was quoted by the official IRNA news agency as saying on a trip to South Africa that Tehran would react "proportionately" to any further pressure and that it wanted more talks.

"Iran is ready to resolve existing differences over its nuclear program through fruitful and careful negotiations," he said. He urged Security Council members due to meet in London in the coming days not to continue their "hostile behavior".

U.N. sanctions were slapped on Iran in December, barring the transfer of technology and know-how to the country's nuclear and missile program. That resolution said further measures could follow if Iran refused to halt enrichment by February 21.

Cheney said during a visit to Australia that it would be a "serious mistake" to allow Iran to become a nuclear power. An Australian newspaper said Cheney also endorsed comments by U.S. Republican Senator John McCain that the only thing worse than a military confrontation with Iran would be a nuclear-armed Iran.

The New Yorker magazine said a Pentagon panel has been created to plan a bombing attack that could be implemented within 24 hours of getting the go-ahead from President George W. Bush.

The special planning group was established within the office of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in recent months, according to an unidentified former U.S. intelligence official cited in the article by investigative reporter Seymour Hers.

The special planning group was established within the office of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in recent months, according to an unidentified former U.S. intelligence official cited in the article by investigative reporter Seymour Hersh.

In response to the report, Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said: "The United States is not planning to go to war with Iran. To suggest anything to the contrary is simply wrong, misleading and mischievous."

To step up pressure on Tehran, Washington has imposed sanctions on two big Iranian banks and three firms, and has sent a second aircraft carrier in the Gulf.

BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- A combination of rocket and bomb attacks -- the worst taking place at the entrance to a university -- killed more than 50 people and wounded dozens of others Sunday in Iraq.

A suicide bomber killed at least 40 people and wounded 55 others when he detonated his explosive vest outside the economic and management college of Mustansriya near Baghdad's Sadr city, an Iraqi Interior Ministry official said. Most of the dead were students, the official said.

A 22-year-old student, Muhanad Nasir, told The Associated Press he saw a commotion at the gate. "Then there was an explosion. I did not feel anything for 15 minutes, and when I returned to consciousness, I found myself in the hospital," said Nasir, who had injuries to his head and chest.(Watch bloody scene at college Video)

The metal gate to the college was twisted by the force of the blast and shrapnel tore chunks out of the cement walls, AP reported.

Video from the scene showed people using rags and clothes to mop up puddles of blood.

Mustansiriya University was struck by twin bombings last month that killed 70 people, also mainly students.

Elsewhere in Baghdad, two rockets landed in an outdoor market in the Abu Dishir Shiite neighborhood, killing at least 10 people and wounding another eight on Sunday morning, the official said.

A car bomb exploded in central Baghdad just 100 yards from the Iranian embassy, killing at least one person and wounding four others, according to a Baghdad police official.

An Iranian embassy employee said no one inside the compound was hurt.

Meanwhile, the death toll from Saturday's suicide car bombing near a mosque in Anbar province was raised to 40, with 65 people wounded, according to an Interior Ministry official.

Local residents told AP that the imam of the Sunni mosque in Habbaniya had spoken out against extremists. Also, according to AP, many who live in the neighborhood are employed by Iraqi military and police forces, who are frequently the targets of militant strikes.

The vehicle exploded as worshippers left the mosque's afternoon prayers, AP reported.

Habbaniya, 40 miles west of Baghdad, is between Falluja and Ramadi.

MIAMI, Florida (AP) -- Parents of one of the world's smallest premature babies got to take her home Wednesday for the first time since she was delivered last fall.

Amillia Sonja Taylor has known only an incubator for a bed at Baptist Children's Hospital since she was delivered in October after less than 22 weeks in the womb.

"The baby is healthy and thriving and left Baptist Children's Hospital today after four months in our neonatal intensive care unit," hospital spokeswoman Liz Latta said.

Amillia, who was just 9 1/2 inches at birth and weighed less than 10 ounces, will still require oxygen at home and a developmental specialist will follow up with her and her parents to track her neurological development.

The infant now weighs about 4 1/2 pounds and is just over 15 1/2 inches long.

Amillia's parents, Eddie and Sonja Taylor of Homestead declined to speak with reporters Wednesday. (Watch more from one of Amillia's doctors Video)

Doctors had hoped to release Amillia from the hospital Tuesday but kept her an extra day to monitor a low white blood cell count that could have indicated a vulnerability to infection.

Full-term births come after 37 to 40 weeks, and few babies born before 22 weeks survive.

Amillia suffered respiratory and digestive problems, as well as a mild brain hemorrhage, but doctors believe those problems will not have major long-term effects.

Amillia was conceived in vitro and was delivered by Caesarean section after an infection caused her mother to go into premature labor, doctors said.