[sci.med.aids] HICN225 News Part 1/7

ATW1H%ASUACAD.BITNET@oac.ucla.edu (Dr David Dodell) (06/21/89)

--- begin part 1 of 7 cut here ---
Volume  2, Number 25                                            June 20, 1989

              +------------------------------------------------+
              !                                                !
              !              Health Info-Com Network           !
              !                    Newsletter                  !
              +------------------------------------------------+
                         Editor: David Dodell, D.M.D.
                   St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center
    10250 North 92nd Street, Suite 210, Scottsdale, Arizona 85258-4599 USA
                           Telephone (602) 860-1121

     (c) 1989 - Distribution on Commercial/Pay Systems Prohibited without
                              Prior Authorization

             International Distribution Coordinator: Robert Klotz
                            Nova Research Institute
            217 South Flood Street, Norman, Oklahoma 73069-5462 USA
                           Telephone (405) 366-3898

The Health Info-Com Network Newsletter is distributed weekly.  Articles  on  a
medical  nature  are  welcomed.  If  you  have an article,  please contact the
editor for information on how to submit it.  If you are intrested  in  joining
the distribution system please contact the distribution coordinator.

E-Mail Address:
                                    Editor:
                              FidoNet = 1:114/15
                           Bitnet = ATW1H @ ASUACAD
                     Internet = ddodell@stjhmc.fidonet.org
                         LISTSERV = MEDNEWS @ ASUACAD

                                 Distribution:
North America                               Australia/Far East    Europe
FidoNet = 1:19/9                            David More            Henk Wevers
Usenet  = krobt@mom.uucp                    FidoNet = 3:711/413   Fidonet
Internet = krobt%mom@uokmax.ecn.uoknor.edu                        2:500/1

                                   Sponsors
                                   ========
   Dr. Edward Delgrosso Black Bag BBS (FidoNet 1:150/101) Tel 1-302-731-1998

===============================================================================

                       T A B L E   O F   C O N T E N T S

1.  Comments from the Editor
     News Concerning USA Today .............................................  1

2.  Medical News
     Medical News for Week Ending June 18, 1989 ............................  2
     Medical News from the United Nations ..................................  7

3.  Center for Disease Control Reports
     [MMWR 6-15-89]  Outbreak of Giardiasis ................................ 15
     Problems Created by Heat-Inactivation of Serum before HIV Testing ..... 18
     Work Injuries in Automotive Parts Manufacturing Company ............... 20
     Guidelines Prophylaxis Pneumocystis Pneumonia for HIV Infected ........ 23

4.  Food & Drug Administration News
     News from the Food and Drug Administration ............................ 32

5.  Columns
     HIV/AIDS Surveillance Report for June 1989 ............................ 39

Health InfoCom Network News                                           Page    i
Volume  2, Number 25                                            June 20, 1989

===============================================================================
                           Comments from the Editor
===============================================================================

                           A Message from the Editor
                                  Concerning
                                   USA Today

I have received several  messages  from  various  readers  of  our  newsletter
concerning our feed from USA Today.  The main problem they cite is the lack of
information to followup on the news items.

I think I have found a solution to this problem, as long as it isn't abused.

For now on,  you will notice that each set of articles will start with a date.
This date is very important.  If the article ends with the following (From the
USA Today xyz Section), then you can find the full length article in that days
issue of USA Today.

However, most of the news items do not have that tag.  If you have a real need
for furthur information,  please contact me direct.  I have spoken to the news
editor  at  USA  Today  who  puts together this section,  and he has agreed to
supply me reference information from any article,  as long  as  he  knows  the
title and the date it was published.

Please  remember  that  I am a volunteer,  and have limited time to track down
these requests, and I don't want to abuse the good nature of the editor at USA
Today.  So please only use this request ability only when you really need more
information.

I hope this will solve some of the problems.  As always,  feedback is welcomed
at any of the electronic mail addresses above.

David

Health InfoCom Network News                                             Page  1
Volume  2, Number 25                                            June 20, 1989

===============================================================================
                                 Medical News
===============================================================================

                  Medical News for Week Ending June 18, 1989
            (c) 1989 USA TODAY/Gannett National Information Network
                          Reproduced with Permission

                                 June 13, 1989

                           AIDS FEAR CHANGES DATING:

   Sixty percent of college students think dating practices have  changed  due
to  concerns  about AIDS.  A survey by New York research firm Decisions Center
Inc. questioned 2,100 full- and part-time students on 350 campuses nationwide.
Results:  62 percent of the men and 59 percent  of  the  women  say  AIDS  has
changed dating practices and 8 percent of the students know someone with AIDS.

                         PLASTIC SURGERY ON THE RISE:

   The number of selected plastic surgery procedures jumped 81 percent between
1982  and  1988,  the  American Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons
said recently.  The group based its estimate  on  the  numbers  of  16  common
procedures  performed  by society members.  The data showed that 77 percent of
plastic surgery patients in 1988 were women, with most between 35 and 50 years
old.

                         PLASTIC SURGERY VIEWS SHIFT:

   More people approve of cosmetic surgery than just six years ago,  according
to  a survey from the American Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons.
The group's 1988 random sample of consumers showed 48 percent of  those  asked
approve  of  the  surgery,  up  from  32  percent  in  1982.  Only  3  percent
disapproved,  while 9 percent  disapproved  in  1982.  Results  were  released
recently.

                          STAR SURGERY CHANGES VIEW:

   Greater  public  acceptance  of  plastic surgery is due to wider use of the
procedures by trend-setters such  as  film  stars,  the  American  Society  of
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons said.  A recent survey showed a 50 percent
increase in acceptance of plastic surgery from 1982  to  1988.  Other  factors
noted in the attitude shift:  greater emphasis on physical fitness and healthy
appearance.

                         EVEN TOTS CAN DECEIVE ADULTS:

   Children as young as  3  showed  deceptive  behavior  in  a  recent  study.
Researchers  at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey studied
groups of 3-year-olds and found half the children lied about peeking at a toy.
Results were published in the current issue of Developmental  Psychology.  The
study  said  kids  who  lied  smiled  more and made other attempts to mask the
deception.

Health InfoCom Network News                                             Page  2
Volume  2, Number 25                                            June 20, 1989

                        FLUID MIGHT CAUSE SPINA BIFIDA:

   New research is focusing on exposure to amniotic  fluid  as  the  cause  of
spina bifida. Scientists at Johns Hopkins University theorize that exposure to
the  fluid,  which  surrounds  the  fetus  but  does  not  harm  skin,  can be
destructive to the spinal cord.  The research is outlined in the current issue
of  Science  News.  Spina  bifida  is  a neural-tube defect that causes spinal
damage.

                         700,000 TO CLAIM BLACK LUNG:

   The U.S.  Labor Department's black lung program will handle  about  700,000
claims  for  disability benefits due to the disease this year,  the department
said.  It estimated that 20 percent of retired miners suffer from black  lung,
while  10  percent  of  active  coal  miners have it.  Black lung is a form of
pneumoconiosis caused by the inhalation of coal dust.

                                 June 14, 1989

                        ONLY CHILDREN RUN HEALTH RISK:

   Adults who were only children are much more likely  to  have  higher  blood
pressure than grownups raised with siblings, a study by New York cardiologists
shows.  The study of nearly 1,500 people found average systolic pressure - the
pressure when the heart beats - was about nine  points  higher.  Theory:  Only
children face more stress from parents who have high expectations.

                          SAYING NO TO AIDS PRESSURE:

   Scientists  must not bow to all pressure to speed up research into new AIDS
treatments or drugs, Anthony Fauchi, who directs AIDS research at the National
Institutes of Health,  said Tuesday.  He said some  AIDS  protesters'  tactics
were destructive and could lead to studying drugs unscientifically.

                            STUDY - FAT CAUSES FAT:

   New findings make it official:  The reason many people are fat is that they
eat too much fat.  Researchers at Laval University in Quebec studied  244  men
who  consumed whatever they liked.  Their findings,  published in the American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition,  indicate subjects  with  high-fat  diets  were
fatter. The data also indicates that exercise does not increase the ability to
burn fat.

                        DOCTORS HELP MORE QUIT SMOKING:

   People  are  more  likely to quit smoking if a doctor tells them to,  a new
study shows.  Doctors at the University of Indiana and  Indianapolis  Veterans
Hospital succeeded in getting patients to quit smoking 15 percent of the time,
compared  to  an  average "quit rate" of 5 percent.  Meanwhile,  only half the
smokers in the study said their doctor has advised them to quit.

                        STUDY - THREE DISORDERS LINKED:

   A Texas study reveals a puzzling link between high blood  pressure,  sexual

Health InfoCom Network News                                             Page  3
Volume  2, Number 25                                            June 20, 1989

difficulties  and a sleep disorder called apnea.  The journal Sleep reports in
its current issue that Baylor College of Medicine found half the male patients
with hypertension and erectile problems also suffered from the sleep disorder.
Just how the three conditions are linked remains a mystery.

                       ULCER TO PNEUMONIA LINK STUDIED:

   Researchers are looking for ways to break  the  chain  that  causes  stress
ulcers  and  then  pneumonia  in  seriously  ill  patients.   Doctors  at  the
University of Iowa are searching  for  treatments  to  battle  stress  ulcers.
Trauma  can  trigger  the ulcers and treatment that lowers stomach acid levels
allows bacteria to flourish and invade the lungs,  causing  potentially  fatal
pneumonia.

                         MICROWAVE DOESN'T HURT FOOD:

   Cooking  food in a microwave oven doesn't reduce nutritional value,  recent
nutritional studies indicate.  In fact,  food cooked in a microwave  might  be
healthier. Ascorbic acid and folate content - both heat-sensitive nutrients in
vegetables  -  are retained better in microwaves than in conventional cooking.
Levels of thiamin, a nutrient in meats, remain the same in both methods.

                           IMPOTENCE CAUSES TRACED:

   Impotence in elderly men is not usually psychological, according to a study
in June's Archives of Internal Medicine.  The study, at the Medical College of
Virginia at Richmond, looked at 121 men with an average age was 68.  More than
45 percent had neurovascular problems that could be treated  effectively,  and
in 15 percent the problems were totally reversible.

                          SCHIZOPHRENIA GENE DOUBTED:

   New  studies  are  dashing  hopes  of finding a single gene responsible for
schizophrenia.  Doctors recently felt they were closing in on such a gene, but
reports  from Scotland and the University of Utah indicate the disorder is too
complex to be triggered by one gene,  Science  News  reports  in  its  current
issue.  The disorder affects about one in 100 people worldwide.

                                 June 15, 1989

                        POLYMER KEY TO ONE-TIME NEEDLE:

   A  polymer  disc  is  the  key  to  a new hypodermic syringe that cannot be
reused.  Scientists at Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory developed  the
syringe to fight the spread of diseases by drug users. A tiny hydrogel polymer
disc  behind  the  needle  allows liquid to flow through its center only once,
then seals within 20 minutes to prevent using again.

                        GAS PERMEABLE CONTACTS BETTER:

   The Consumer Union on Wednesday gave  high  praise  to  new  gas  permeable
contact  lenses.  The agency said the new lenses,  which permit more oxygen to
reach the surface of the eye,  are  more  comfortable,  easier  to  clean  and
maintain  and  last  longer than conventional soft contact lenses.  The agency
reports on the lenses in the current of Consumer Reports magazine.

Health InfoCom Network News                                             Page  4
Volume  2, Number 25                                            June 20, 1989

                       ENZYMES MIGHT FIGHT CHOLESTEROL:

   Enzymes that act as anti-cholesterol agents might help reduce the  nation's
blood  cholesterol level from 50 percent to 80 percent.  Research by Frost and
Sullivan released this week indicates that 10 enzymes are currently under test
for use as cholesterol-reducing food additives.  The consulting firm predicted
their use would rise through the 1990s.

                         REPORT EYES KIDS' DISORDERS:

   Marked  advances  have  been made in treating a variety of childhood mental
disorders in the past two decades,  a report  by  the  Institute  of  Medicine
indicates.  The  report  notes that 12 percent of all children younger than 18
suffer from some form of diagnosable mental disorder.

                        STUDY - ALCOHOL USE A PRIORITY:

   The Surgeon General's Workshop on Health Promotion  and  Aging  released  a
report  this  week  calling  alcohol  abuse among the elderly an urgent health
priority.   The  report  linked  alcohol  abuse  to  increased  incidence   of
cardiovascular disease,  coronary artery disease and hypertension.  The report
listed specific recommended measures to reduce the rate of alcohol abuse among
the elderly.

                            LASERS TO ZAP CAVITIES:

   Dentists might soon be replacing the drill  with  a  laser  that  vaporizes
cavities  painlessly  and  without  anesthesia.  A California laser technology
company unveiled the dLase 300 in New  York  Wednesday.  Sunrise  Technologies
Inc.  said  the  laser  would "change the face of dentistry." Tests of the new
laser by the Food and Drug Administration are under way, officials said.

                               June 16-18, 1989

                           AIDS SPENDING ESCALATING:

   The federal government spent $5.5 billion on AIDS  research  and  treatment
from 1982 to 1988.  Spending is expected to be $2.1 billion in 1989 alone. The
New England Journal of Medicine reports in  its  current  issue  that  federal
spending on AIDS will increase annually and exceed $4.3 billion in 1992 alone.
About 60 percent of funds will come from the U.S. Public Health Service.

                          AIDS-FUSION MOLECULE FOUND:

   Researchers  at  Johns  Hopkins University report identifying a molecule on
the surface of white blood cells that helps AIDS-infected cells fuse with  and
pass  their  infection  to  uninfected  cells.  The findings,  reported in the
current issue of Science News, might help physicians find new ways of battling
the progression of the disease in infected patients.

                        FDA TO OPEN AIDS DRUG HOTLINE:

   The Food and Drug Administration will initiate a  computerized  information
service  on  AIDS  therapies  and  clinical  trials.  The service will include

Health InfoCom Network News                                             Page  5
Volume  2, Number 25                                            June 20, 1989

results of clinical trials and will include results of earlier tests with  the
sponsors' permission. The agency is expected to set up and promote a toll-free
number within weeks.

                          MOST SUPPORT ANIMAL TESTS:

   More  than three-fourths of Americans say they think it is necessary to use
animals in medical  research,  a  recent  Gallup  Poll  indicates.  The  poll,
commissioned  by  the  American  Medical  Association and reported in a recent
newsletter,  reported that 77 percent of 1,500 adults thought  animal  testing
was necessary to advance medicine. Seventeen percent disagreed.

                        WIDER HEART DONOR POOL SOUGHT:

   A  Canadian  cardiac  specialist  called for transplant programs to include
damaged hearts in donor programs. Dr.  Arthur Dodek of St.  Paul's Hospital in
Vancouver,  British Columbia, argued that many people recover from minor heart
attacks.  Dodek argued in this week's New England  Journal  of  Medicine  that
programs that demand flawless donor hearts are unrealistic.

                         FIRM TO TEST NEW VENTILATOR:

   Infrasonics   Inc.   on   Thursday   announced   that  the  Food  and  Drug
Administration  had  recommended  testing  the  company's  new  high-frequency
ventilator,  the HFV Infant Star.  An FDA panel will examine the device, which
allows physicians to ventilate infants  unresponsive  to  other  methods.  The
company said Thursday that it expected approval after the review.

                         OLD DRUG MIGHT HOLD NEW HOPE:

   A  drug  long  used to combat African sleeping sickness might be a powerful
anti-cancer  agent.  Researchers  at  the  National  Cancer  Institute  report
suranim,  developed  in  the  1920s,  shrank  patients' tumors by more than 50
percent in a recent trial.  The drug is available from the Centers for Disease
Control as an "orphan drug," one rarely used.

                        DOCTORS USE NEW DIABETES TEST:

   Scientists  have  developed  a  genetic  test  that  might  help  predict a
patient's chances of developing the most serious  form  of  diabetes.  Science
News reports in its current issue that doctors at the University of Pittsburgh
School  of  Medicine  said the test analyzed DNA taken from white blood cells.
While the test doesn't diagnose diabetes, it can be an indicator.

Health InfoCom Network News                                             Page  6
Volume  2, Number 25                                            June 20, 1989

                     Medical News from the United Nations

            MARKETING PSYCHIATRIC CARE FOR KIDS: A BOOMING BUSINESS

The ads make it clear.  ``Mental illness has come out of the closet,  and even
your  child  may  be  a victim.  Watch for the signs,  and call us for help.''
Fearful, guilt-ridden parents, worried about teen drug abuse, depression,  and
suicide,  increasingly  are  being  spurred on by the advertising to go to the
experts.  The result  is  an  expanding  phenomenon  of  adolescents  entering
psychiatric hospitals for treatment.  By even the most conservative estimates,
150,000 teenagers are expected to be hospitalized for  psychiatric  care  this
year.  The  trend  has become big business.  According to stock analysts,  the
revenues of companies that sell these services could grow by as much as 20%  a
year  over  the  next  few  years.   But  critics,   including  mental  health
professionals and child-advocacy groups, point to studies that have found that
many, if not most, of these admissions are inappropriate,  and actually may be
harmful.  The ads,  they say,  tempt parents to hospitalize their children for
what is normal, if difficult, adolescent behavior.  Said Kirk Johnson, general
counsel  for  the  American Medical Association (which fought a battle against
advertising by medical professionals all the way to the Supreme Court in 1972,
but lost):  ``When a doctor or hospital implies a result,  that they will  fix
something  that  is wrong,  consumers are willing to believe that authority.''
But in the other corner  sits  Carol  Szpak,  spokesperson  for  the  American
Psychiatric  Association.  ``You  can  always  find disagreeable and tasteless
ads,'' she said,  ``but our members are telling people there is treatment  out
there,  and  the  ads  serve  in  a  way  to  destigmatize the whole treatment
process.'' The bottom line?  Psychiatric hospital beds in for-profit hospitals
increased by 150% from 1969 to 1982, beds that had to be filled. The hospitals
evidently  found  a  successful solution by targeting a new audience--families
with children,  particularly adolescents--with advertising and other marketing
ploys,  ranging  from seminars for guidance counselors to a contest awarding a
cruise to a hospital employee generating the most  admissions.  Successful  or
not,  however,  the  approach  is  controversial even among the professionals.
``Because of these ads,  everyone is painted with the same brush,'' said Irene
Nelson,  intake coordinator for Chicago's Associates in Adolescent Psychiatry.
Parents want a child admitted who balks at homework or cuts school for a  day,
she said.  ``We wouldn't hospitalize,  but others probably would.  It's gotten
out of hand.'' Said Orville  McElfresh,  marketing  VP  for  Parkside  Medical
Services,  also of Chicago:  ``Advertising has become dramatic,  hard hitting,
more direct.  Being subtle just doesn't work.'' CHICAGO  TRIBUNE  May  30,1989
p.1.  (Compiled  from Newspapers and Medical Journals for IMTS's Healthweek In
Review.)

            AIDS BLOOD TEST MAY TAKE ALMOST 3 YRS. TO TURN POSITIVE

People may harbor silent infections with the  AIDS  virus  yet  have  negative
screening tests for nearly three years after becoming infected, according to a
California  study.  Not  only  is this latency period far longer than the time
lag previously documented but the study also found  that  such  a  ``prolonged
period  of  latency...may be more common that previously recognized'' and that
``the degree of infectiousness during such periods  is  unknown.''  The  study
used blood samples drawn every six months from homosexual men who continued to
engage  in high risk sexual practices.  The 133 men who formed the study group
and whose screening AIDS tests were negative initially were drawn in 1986 from

Health InfoCom Network News                                             Page  7
Volume  2, Number 25                                            June 20, 1989

a much larger group of 1,637 homosexual men enrolled in the Los Angeles branch
of the Multicenter AIDS  Cohort  Study.  The  researchers,  led  by  David  T.
Imagawa, PhD, of the University of California at Los Angeles, found that 31 of
these  men  who  had  negative  screening  antibody  tests--23%--had the human
immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) in their blood when viral cultures  were  done.
Four  of  the 31 men in the study converted to positive screening blood tests;
27 remained negative 28 to 36 months after the virus was first isolated. Using
the sensitive polymerase chain reaction  which  can  detect  tiny  amounts  of
genetic  information,  the investigators demonstrated that two of the four men
had the virus in their systems 35 months before seroconversion  and  that  one
was  infected  30  months  before  his  screening  test  became  positive.  An
accompanying editorial by William A. Haseltine, PhD, of the Dana-Farber Cancer
Institute in Boston,  explains that this study offers both good and bad  news.
The  good news is that the long latency period suggests that the body's immune
system can fend off symptoms for long periods,  suggesting that  ``it  may  be
possible  to  suppress  the  expression  of  the  virus  with  combinations of
antiviral drugs.'' But the findings also raise ``the sobering possibility that
HIV-1 infections may be transmitted by blood and organ donors who are silently
infected.'' The California team  warns,  however,  that  this  extremely  long
latency may not occur in other groups,  such as those who acquire AIDS because
of contaminated  blood  ``Additional  studies  are  needed  to  determine  the
proportion  of  infections  that currently available serologic tests for HIV-1
antibody may not detect,'' they wrote.  NEW ENGL J MED June 1,1989;  320:1458-
1462,  1487-1489.  (Compiled  from  Newspapers and Medical Journals for IMTS's
Healthweek In Review.)

         MEDICAL NOTEBOOK; More doubt raised about standard AIDS test

  More  evidence  emerged  here  yesterday  that  people  who test negative on
standard antibody tests of exposure to AIDS may actually harbor the  virus  on
the basis of another test called PCR.

   Half  of the female sexual partners of AIDS-infected hemophiliac men appear
to have traces of the AIDS viral genetic material  in  their  systems  on  the
basis  of  PCR,   or  polymerase  chain  reaction  tests,   even  though  they
consistently tested negative over a period of three years on standard antibody
tests,  said Indira K.  Hewlett,  a scientist at  the  Center  for  Biologics,
Evaluation and Research in Bethesda, Md.

   Furthermore,  said  Hewlett,  it  was  the  wives  in  couples  who did not
consistently use condoms who were most likely to test PCR-positive.

   Hewlett's report to scientists attending the Fifth International Conference
on AIDS is "one of the most important studies at this conference and the first
clean study with PCR that I have seen.  I believe  these  results,"  said  Dr.
James  Goedert,  an  expert  in  AIDS  transmission  among hemophiliacs at the
National Institutes of Health.

   Hewlett's study,  done for the US Food and Drug  Administration,  which  is
interested  in  PCR  as a potential measure to monitor the safety of the blood
supply,  appears to add support to the conclusions of  a  controversial  study
published last week in the New England Journal of Medicine that found that the
AIDS  virus  can  be isolated in the blood of one-quarter of high-risk gay men

Health InfoCom Network News                                             Page  8
Volume  2, Number 25                                            June 20, 1989

who  test  negative  on  antibody  tests.  That  study  has  provoked  intense
discussion and worry as well as skepticism among scientists here.

   Unlike the Journal study, however, Hewlett's team did not isolate the virus
from the hemophiliacs' wives.  At a press conference last night, US government
scientists called the Hewlett study provocative but noted that  at  least  two
similar  studies were unable to find evidence of AIDS infection in such a high
percentage of hemophiliacs' wives.

   In other presentations yesterday,  AIDS experts said they still believe 1.5
mnillion Americans are infected with the AIDS virus.  Though this official  US
government  estimate  has  not changed in several years,  scientists said they
were increasingly confident of this figure.

   They presented strongly supportive data from studies on US  Army  recruits,
active  soldiers,  27  "sentinel"  hospitals,  outpatient blood screening from
private physicians' offices, job corps applicants and childbearing women,  all
of which support the 1.5 million figure,  noted Dr.  Timothy Dondero,  an AIDS
specialist at the federal Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta.

   Most of the epidemiological studies also supported the basic shift  of  the
AIDS epidemic toward minorities.

   And  the  US  Army  data  also  supported  the picture scientists have long
believed about how the AIDS virus is  transmitted.  Among  soldiers  who  were
infected  with  the  AIDS  virus but who denied they had engaged in known risk
behaviors such as intravenous drug abuse or anal  sex  with  another  man,  77
percent turned out, after confidential interviews, to have actually engaged in
such risk behaviors.  Furthermore,  among these men at least,  bisexuality was
far more common than only male-male  sex.  In  a  sobering  study  of  Nairobi
prostitutes, researchers led by Joan Kreiss of the University of Washington in
Seattle  found  that  the  spermicidal compound Nonoxynol-9 not only failed to
protect the women against the AIDS virus,  but was associated  with  a  higher
rate  of genital ulcers.  Genital ulcers are a known risk factor that enhances
the ease of transmission of the AIDS virus.  More evidence  emerged  yesterday
that  breast milk from infected mothers can transmit the AIDS virus to nursing
infants,  according to a study by Subhash Hira  in  Lusaka,  Zambia.  Although
growing  numbers  of  children  in Africa may be getting infected through this
route,  said Hira,  breast feeding is nevertheless a relatively  "inefficient"
mode  of  virus  transmission.  And  because there are no good alternatives to
breast feeding in the developing  world,  he  said,  public  health  officials
should  not  discourage  women  from  nursing.  Like many other doctors at the
conference - at  which  11,600  delegates  are  officially  registered  -  Dr.
Margaret  Fischl  of  the  University  of  Miami School of Medicine stressed a
growing sense of optimism about treatment for AIDS infection.

   AIDS  therapy  will  soon  resemble  cancer  treatment   in   the   growing
availability  of combination drug regimens.  Such combination therapies should
help offset toxicities between drugs and also take  advantage  of  synergistic
activity between drugs.  Most promising so far,  said Fischl, is a combination
of AZT,  the only antiviral drug so far FDA-approved,  plus GM-CSF,  an immune
system booster, plus alpha-interferon, which can act as both an immune booster
and antiviral.

   On this regimen, she said, AIDS patients were able to keep their blood cell

--- end part 1 of 7 cut here ---