Publication | Open Access
A Period of Transient Viremia and Occult Infection Precedes Persistent Viremia and Antiviral Immune Responses during Multiple Low-Dose Intravaginal Simian Immunodeficiency Virus Inoculations
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Citations
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References
2004
Year
ImmunologyTransient ViremiaSimian Immunodeficiency VirusVulvar DiseasesViral PersistenceRhesus MacaquesHuman RetrovirusVaginitisAntiviral Immune ResponsesPrimary ImmunodeficiencyVirologyChronic Viral InfectionHivPathogenesisPersistent ViremiaAntiviral ResponseAntiviral TherapyMedicineViral Immunity
In rhesus macaques, classic systemic infection, characterized by persistent viremia and seroconversion, occurred after multiple low-dose (10(3) 50% tissue culture infective doses) intravaginal (IVAG) inoculations with simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) strain SIVmac251. Monkeys developed classic SIV infections after a variable number of low-dose IVAG exposures to SIVmac251. Once established, the systemic infection was identical to SIV infection following high-dose IVAG SIV inoculation. However, occult systemic infection characterized by transient cell-associated or cell-free viremia consistently occurred early in the series of multiple vaginal SIV exposures. Further, antiviral cellular immune responses were present prior to the establishment of a classic systemic infection in the low-dose vaginal SIV transmission model.
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