Arbiter
Well-Known Member
I found an interesting entry on wikipedia the other day about ICL or idiopathic CD4+ lymphocytopenia.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idiopathic_CD4+_lymphocytopenia
It's a condition characterized by a very low CD4+ white blood cell count. The same blood cell found deficient in AIDS. Some studies have attributed ICL to drug abuse, as certain recreational drugs result in serious CD4+ deficiency.
What I find interesting is that although the definitions for AIDS and ICL are nearly identical, ICL is apparently a very rare disease.
AIDS definition:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AIDS
AIDS is a so-called "condition". It's not a virus like HIV where physical evidence (aside from the white blood cell count) proves the condition.
ICL CD4+ definition:
Nearly identical, except for AIDS definition requiring HIV+ evidence. The symptoms of the two conditions, opportunistic infections, are identical.
Some questions I have:
1. Is it possible that ICL is "HIV negative AIDS"? I'm not saying (never did) that AIDS is not caused by HIV. But the question is relevant.
2. Since the two definitions are so close, is it possible that the condition known as AIDS is simply ICL without the presence of HIV?
3. If HIV presence is disregarded, then technically any condition that results in low CD4+ cells can "cause" AIDS?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idiopathic_CD4+_lymphocytopenia
It's a condition characterized by a very low CD4+ white blood cell count. The same blood cell found deficient in AIDS. Some studies have attributed ICL to drug abuse, as certain recreational drugs result in serious CD4+ deficiency.
What I find interesting is that although the definitions for AIDS and ICL are nearly identical, ICL is apparently a very rare disease.
AIDS definition:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AIDS
In 1993, the CDC expanded their definition of AIDS to include all HIV positive people with a CD4+ T cell count below 200 per µL of blood or 14% of all lymphocytes.[72]
AIDS is a so-called "condition". It's not a virus like HIV where physical evidence (aside from the white blood cell count) proves the condition.
ICL CD4+ definition:
CD4+ cell count less than 300 cells per microliter
Lack of laboratory evidence of HIV infection
Nearly identical, except for AIDS definition requiring HIV+ evidence. The symptoms of the two conditions, opportunistic infections, are identical.
Some questions I have:
1. Is it possible that ICL is "HIV negative AIDS"? I'm not saying (never did) that AIDS is not caused by HIV. But the question is relevant.
2. Since the two definitions are so close, is it possible that the condition known as AIDS is simply ICL without the presence of HIV?
3. If HIV presence is disregarded, then technically any condition that results in low CD4+ cells can "cause" AIDS?