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- From: aids-request@cs.ucla.edu (Sci.med.aids Moderation Team)
- Subject: AIDS FAQ part3of4: Frequently Asked Questions with Answers
- Message-ID: <aids-faq3-11-1993@wustl.wubios.edu>
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- Summary: Please read this before posting to sci.med.aids.
- Keywords: FAQ, AIDS, HIV
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- Organization: Division of Biostatistics, WUMS, St. Louis, MO
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- Date: Wed, 10 Nov 1993 17:38:22 GMT
- Approved: greening@sti.com (Dan R. Greening)
- sma@wustl.wubios.edu (Sci.med.aids Moderation Team)
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- Last-Modified: 10 Nov 1993
-
- ===============================================================================
-
- Section 5. The common debates.
-
- Q5.1 What are Strecker and Segal's theories that HIV is manmade?
- Q5.2 Other conspiracy theories.
- Q5.3 Duesberg's Risk-Group Theory
- Q5.4 Contaminated polio vaccine? (please contribute)
- Q5.5 Who is Lorraine Day? (please contribute)
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Question 5.1. What are Strecker and Segal's theories that HIV is manmade?
-
- Jakob Segal's theory is that HIV was formed from visna (a sheep virus) and
- HTLV-I (Human T-cell Leukemia Virus) by US army biological research labs
- in 1977 or 1978. The virus supposedly escaped accidentally after being
- tested on prisoners.
-
- Robert Strecker's theory is that HIV was formed from visna and BLV (Bovine
- Leukemia Virus) by the US in the 1970's after 30-40 years of work. The
- virus was supposedly tested on populations in Africa and was deliberately
- introduced into the US homosexual community through the hepatitis B
- vaccination program.
-
- The alleged evidence to support this theory:
-
- * Visna is very similar to HIV. HIV can be formed by combining the genes
- of visna and BLV or HTLV. HIV is not similar to primate viruses. The
- government was interested in biological warfare and was planning to make
- an immune-system destroying virus. In particular, the DOD
- Appropriations for 1970 Hearings, 91st Congress, Part 6, p 129 states:
-
- There are two things about the biological agent field I would like to
- mention. One is the possibility of technological surprise. Molecular
- biology is a field that is advancing very rapidly, and eminent
- biologists believe that within a period of 5 to 10 years it would be
- possible to produce a synthetic biological agent, an agent that does not
- naturally exist and for which no natural immunity could have been
- acquired.
-
- Mr. Sikes. Are we doing any work in that field?
-
- Dr. MacArthur. We are not.
-
- Mr. Sikes. Why not? Lack of money or lack of interest?
-
- Dr. MacArthur. Certainly not lack of interest.
-
- [MacArthur provides the following information:]
-
- The dramatic progress being made in the field of molecular biology led
- us to investigate the relevance of this field of science to biological
- warfare. A small group of experts considered this matter and provided
- the following observations:
-
- * All biological agents up to the present time are representatives of
- naturally occurring disease, and are thus known by scientists
- throughout the world. They are easily available to qualified
- scientists for research, either for offensive or defensive purposes.
-
- * Within the next 5 to 10 years, it would probably be possible to make a
- new infective microorganism which could differ in certain important
- aspects from any known disease-causing organisms. Most important of
- these is that it might be refractory to the immunological and
- therapeutic processes upon which we depend to maintain our relative
- freedom from infectious disease.
-
- * A research program to explore the feasibility of this could be
- completed in approximately 5 years at a total cost of $10 million.''
-
- * HIV is a new disease that appeared suddenly in the late 1970's without a
- natural source.
-
- * HIV could have been easily synthesized in a laboratory in the 1970's.
-
- The evidence is overwhelmingly against these theories. The key problem
- with these theories is they arose in the early 1980's, before SIV (simian
- immunodeficiency virus) was discovered and before the relevant viruses
- were sequenced. The genetic sequences clearly show:
-
- * HIV is much closer to SIV (simian immunodeficiency virus) than HIV is to
- visna, BLV, HTLV or any other known virus.
-
- * HIV can't be formed from splicing together parts of other known viruses.
-
- Viral genetic sequences can be ftp'd from ncbi.nlm.nih.gov in
- repository/aids-db.
-
- To summarize the other arguments against Strecker and Segal's theories:
-
- * The military testimony described a future study to see if making a new
- agents was feasible, not to actually produce it. More importantly, they
- are looking for an agent refractory to immunological processes; this
- means something resisting immunological processes. The quoted testimony
- and other parts of the testimony state they are looking for a new agent
- for which people do not have natural immunity; this is entirely
- different from an agent that destroys the immune system. It is also
- much easier than producing something like HIV.
-
- * Most scientists believe HIV evolved from SIV or a close relative. HIV
- did not suddenly appear in the late 1970's, but has been found in
- preserved blood samples from the 1950's.
-
- * Biotechnology was not sufficently advanced in the 1970's to produce
- something like HIV, and it is debatable that it would be possible even
- now. Since the details of HIV are not understood even now, it is
- inconceivable that someone could have deliberately designed HIV in the
- 1970's.
-
- Strecker's claim that HIV was introduced via hepatitis B vaccinations is
- extremely doubtful. McDonald et al, Lancet, 1983 Oct 15, 2(8355):882-4
- state the incidence of AIDS in unvaccinated sexually active homosexual men
- was _higher_ than in vaccinated men, although the rates were too low for
- statistical significance. Stevens et al, JAMA, 1986 April 25,
- 255(16):2167-2172 tested blood samples from the beginning of the
- vaccination program and found that 6.6% were already HIV-positive.
- Therefore, HIV couldn't have been introduced via the vaccinations.
-
- While evaluating these theories, I recommend treating Segal's and
- Strecker's literature citations with extreme skepticism, as they are both
- rather casual about the connection between their claims and the contents
- of the papers. In particular, Strecker provides quotes that do not appear
- in the cited papers.
-
- Finally, since both theories allege a coverup of the connection between
- visna and HIV, a clear explanation of their relationships may be helpful.
- The viruses described above are all retroviruses. Retroviruses have three
- subfamilies: Oncoviruses, Lentiviruses, and Spumaviruses. HTLV is a
- oncovirus, while the remainder are lentiviruses. The analysis of genetic
- sequences gives strong evidence for the evolution of lentiviruses. They
- apparently branched into the primate lentiviruses (HIV-1, HIV-2, and SIV),
- and the nonprimate lentiviruses (visna, BLV, EIAV, FIV, CAEV, etc.) Thus,
- HIV and visna have many similarities since they are both lentiviruses, but
- HIV and SIV are much more similar. (See Fields Virology for more
- information on retrovirus classification and "The Emergence of Simian
- Human Immunodeficiency Viruses", Myers et al, AIDS Research and Human
- Retroviruses, 8(3), 1992 373-386 for more information on lentivirus
- evolution.)
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Question 5.2. Other conspiracy theories.
-
- One school of thought holds that the "AIDS was a U.S. biological warfare
- experiment" myth was extensively spread as part of a dezinformatsiya
- campaign by Department V of the Soviet KGB (their `active measures'
- group). They may not have invented the premise (Soviet disinformation
- doctrine favored legends originated by third parties), but they added a
- number of signature details such as the name of the supposed development
- site (usually Fort Meade in Maryland) which still show up in most
- retellings.
-
- According to a defector who was once the KGB chief rezident in Great
- Britain, the KGB promulgated this legend through controlled sources in
- Europe and the Third World. The Third World version (only) included the
- claim that HIV was the result of an attempt to build a "race bomb", a
- plague that would kill only non-whites.
-
- From the CDC AIDS Clearinghouse:
-
- "Soviets Secretly Tried to Blame U.S. for AIDS--CIA" Reuters (09/30/93)
-
- Langley, Va.--For more than five years, the former Soviet Union attempted
- to blame the AIDS virus on a plot by U.S. military scientists, according
- to newly declassified CIA documents. The papers reported that the Soviets
- launched a campaign in 1983 aiming to tie the emergence of AIDS to
- American biological weapons research. The disinformation was circulated
- in 25 different languages in over 200 publications, as well as in posters,
- leaflets, and radio broadcasts, in more than 80 countries before the
- campaign was finally abandoned by the Soviets, according to a study cited
- by the CIA in the documents. The Soviets dropped the campaign in 1988
- when the United States refused to cooperate with them on a research
- program on AIDS, which was by then spreading in the U.S.S.R., said the CIA
- article. The Soviet campaign was apparently retaliation for the Reagan
- administration's claims of Soviet-produced "yellow rain," or yellow traces
- found on vegetation due to a Soviet biological weapon.
-
- Reproduction of the above excerpt is encouraged; however, copies may not
- be sold, and the CDC Clearinghouse should be cited as the source of this
- information. Copyright 1993, Information, Inc., Bethesda, MD
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Question 5.3. Duesberg's Risk-Group Theory
-
- The following discussion is excerpted from the sci.skeptic ``Frequently
- Questioned Answers'' posting.
-
- The generally accepted theory is that AIDS is caused by the Human
- Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV). There are two different versions of HIV:
- HIV-1 and HIV-2. These viruses are believed, on the basis of their
- genetic sequences, to have evolved from the Simian Immunodeficiency Virus
- (SIV), with HIV-2 being much more similar to SIV. Several years after the
- initial HIV infection, the immune system is weakened to the point where
- opportunistic infections occur, resulting in the syndrome of AIDS. A good
- reference for more information on the "mainstream" view of AIDS is:
-
- The Science of AIDS: readings from Scientific American magazine. New
- York: W.H. Freeman, c1989.
-
- Peter Duesberg has promulgated this theory: HIV is a harmless retrovirus
- that may serve as a marker for people in AIDS high-risk groups. AIDS is
- not a contagious syndrome caused by one conventional virus or microbe.
- AIDS is probably caused by conventional pathogenic factors: administration
- of blood transfusions or drugs, promiscuous male homosexual activity
- associated with drugs, acute parasitic infections, and malnutrition.
- Drugs such as AZT promote AIDS, rather than fight it. His theory is
- explained in detail in "Human Immunodeficiency Virus and Acquired
- Immunodeficiency Syndrome: Correlation but not Causation", Proc. Natl.
- Acad. Sci. USA V86 pp.755-764, (Feb. 1989).
-
- He claims as evidence for his theory:
-
- * HIV does not meet Koch's postulates for the causative agent of an
- infectious disease.
-
- * The conversion rate from HIV infection to AIDS depends greatly on the
- country and risk group membership, so HIV isn't sufficient to cause
- AIDS.
-
- * The HIV virus is minimally active, does not seem to infect many cells,
- and is suppressed by the immune system, so how could it cause problems?
-
- * It takes between 2 and 15 years from HIV infection for AIDS to occur.
- HIV should cause illness right away or never.
-
- * HIV is similar to other retroviruses that don't cause AIDS. There seems
- to be nothing special about HIV that would cause AIDS.
-
- * AIDS patients suffer very different diseases in the US and Africa, which
- suggests that the cofactors are responsible, not AIDS.
-
- * How could two viruses, HIV-1 and HIV-2, evolve at the same time? It
- doesn't seem likely that two deadly viruses would show up together.
-
- Virtually the entire scientific community considers Duesberg's theory
- unsupportable, although he was a respected researcher before he came out
- with his theory about AIDS. There is no suggestion that his theories are
- the result of a political agenda or homophobia.
-
- Some of the arguments against him are:
-
- * People who receive HIV tainted blood become HIV+ and come down with
- AIDS. People who receive HIV-free blood don't get AIDS (unless they get
- HIV somewhere else). Thus, it is the HIV, not the transfusion, that
- causes AIDS. See also Q2.4 `How risky is a blood transfusion?' for
- details on how blood transfusions have become less dangerous since HIV
- antibody testing began.
-
- * The risk factors (homosexuality, drug use, transfusions, etc.) have been
- around for a very long time, but AIDS doesn't show up until HIV shows
- up. People who engage in homosexuality, drug use, etc. but aren't
- exposed to HIV don't get AIDS. On the other hand, people who aren't
- members of "risk groups" but are exposed to HIV get AIDS. Thus, it is
- the HIV, not the risk factors, that causes AIDS.
-
- * With a few recent exceptions, everyone with an AIDS-like immune
- deficiency tests positive for HIV. Everyone with HIV apparently gets
- AIDS eventually, after an average of 8 years.
-
- * Koch's postulates are more of historical interest than practical use.
- There are many diseases that don't satisfy the postulates.
-
- * It is not understood exactly how HIV causes AIDS, but a lack of
- understanding of the details isn't a reason to reject HIV.
-
- * A recent study by Ascher (see abstract below) matched up people in the
- same risk groups and found those with HIV got AIDS but those without HIV
- didn't.
-
- More information can be found in published rebuttals to Duesberg, such as
- in Nature V345 pp.659-660 (June 21, 1990), and in Duesberg's debate with
- Blattner, Gallo, Temin, Science V241 pp.514-517 (1988).
-
- Here are some recent references to Duesberg's theory:
-
- Kolata, Gina, Debunking Doubts That H.I.V. Causes AIDS, New York Times
- (03/11/93), P. B13.
-
- A team of California researchers has disproved a theory claiming that
- recreational drug use, and not HIV, is the cause of AIDS. The scientists
- reported in a commentary published today in Nature that their research
- shows no relationship between recreational drug use, excluding IV-drugs,
- and the development of AIDS. The research team was led by Dr. Michael S.
- Ascher, an immunologist at the California Department of Health Services,
- and Dr. Warren Winklestein Jr., an epidemiologist at the University of
- California--Berkeley. Dr. Ascher and colleagues wrote their paper in
- response to a challenge by Tom Bethell, a media fellow at the Hoover
- Institution at Stanford University, to compare people who used drugs with
- those who didn't and to determine whether those who took drugs had a
- higher incidence of AIDS. Bethell wrote in an article in the San
- Francisco Chronicle of the theory proposed six years ago by Dr. Peter H.
- Duesberg, a molecular biologist at the University of California--Berkeley.
- Duesberg argues that HIV is not the cause of AIDS and that the drug AZT
- speeds, rather than slows, the depletion of the immune system. Bethell
- asked why no research had been done on this hypothesis. Therefore, Dr.
- Ascher et al. retested their hypothesis of the analysis of the San
- Francisco Men's Study, a group of 1,034 randomly selected single men who
- lived in San Francisco and were 25-54 years old in 1984, when the study
- began. The researchers found that homosexuals and heterosexuals in the
- study were equally likely to use drugs. However, 26 percent of
- homosexuals developed AIDS, whereas none of the heterosexuals did. All of
- the men were infected with HIV, but there was no link between drug use and
- AIDS. Related Story: Wall Street Journal (03/11) P. B5
-
- Ascher, M.S. et al., Does Drug Use Cause AIDS?, Nature (03/11/93) Vol.
- 362, No. 6416, P. 103.
-
- Although Peter Duesberg, a professor of molecular biology at the
- University of California--Berkeley, believes that AIDS and drug use are
- related, they are not, writes M.S. Ascher et al. of the California
- Department of Health Services in Berkeley, Calif. Duesberg has maintained
- since 1987 that HIV is not the infectious aetiological agent for AIDS and
- has recently stated that either drug consumption or conventional clinical
- deficiencies and their treatments cause AIDS-related illnesses. However,
- the researchers found this untrue. They analyzed data from a unique
- population-based cohort study, the San Francisco Men's Health Study
- (SFMHS). It is based on a randomly selected cohort of 1,027 single men
- 25-54 years old. The researchers examined the cohort at 6-month intervals
- for 96 months, and obtained drug-use data and determined HIV serostatus at
- each examination. The researchers compared heavy drug use for the
- 25-months period before entry into the study among 215 heterosexual and
- 812 homosexual/bisexual cohort members. Except for amyl nitrate, with 18
- percent heavy use in homosexuals versus no heavy use among heterosexuals,
- the percentage of subjects reporting heavy use of each drug was similar in
- both sexual preference groups: 36 versus 39 percent for marijuana; 7
- versus 4 percent for cocaine; and 1 versus 5 percent for amphetamines,
- respectively. During the 96 months of follow-up, 215 cases of AIDS
- occurred among the homosexual/bisexual men compared with none among the
- heterosexuals. It was found that if heavy use of marijuana, cocaine or
- amphetamines is casually linked to AIDS, a cumulative incidence of 56
- cases among the heterosexual subjects would be expected.
-
- Duesberg, Peter, HIV and the Aetiology of AIDS, Lancet (04/10/93) Vol.
- 341, No. 8850, P. 957.
-
- Because there is no proof that HIV is the cause of AIDS, the hypothesis
- that drug use leads to AIDS will hopefully become a hindrance to the
- physiologically (AZT) and psychologically (positive AIDS test) toxic
- public health initiatives, writes Peter Duesberg of the University of
- California--Berkeley. In the Lancet's March 13 issue, Schechter et al.
- call Duesberg's hypothesis that injected and orally used recreational
- drugs and AZT lead to AIDS, "a hindrance to public health initiatives."
- However, their hypothesis that HIV is the cause of AIDS has not attained
- any public health benefits. The U.S. government spends $4 billion
- annually, but no vaccine, no therapy, no prevention, and no AIDS control
- have resulted from work on this hypothesis. Schechter et al. conclude
- that HIV has a key role in CD4 depletion and AIDS based on epidemiological
- correlations with antibodies against HIV and with self reported
- recreational drug use among homosexuals from Vancouver. However, their
- survey neglects to disprove Duesberg's drug-AIDS hypothesis, because it
- does not provide controls--i.e., confirmed drug-free AIDS cases--and
- because it does not quantify drug use and ignores AZT use altogether. To
- refute Duesberg's hypothesis Schechter would have to produce a controlled
- study demonstrating that over a period of up to 10 years HIV-positive
- patients who use recreational drugs or AZT or both have the same AIDS
- risks as positives who do not do so. The 10 year period is claimed by
- proponents of the HIV hypothesis to be the time needed for HIV to cause
- AIDS. Alternatively, they could show that HIV-free individuals who have
- used drugs for 10 years never get AIDS-defining illnesses, concludes
- Duesberg.
-
- Clayton, Julie, Duesberg's Anti-AZT Campaign Continues, Nature (06/24/93)
- Vol. 363, No. 6431, P. 660.
-
- The controversial American molecular biologist who claims that
- recreational drug use rather than HIV is the cause of AIDS has rejected as
- a "fabrication" the findings of a recent study designed to disprove his
- hypothesis. Michael Ascher and colleagues of the California Department of
- Health Services used data from the San Francisco Men's Health Study to
- demonstrate that men who were heavy drug users but showed no evidence of
- HIV infection did not contract the virus, whereas those in the study who
- were either light drug users, or did not use drugs at all, were shown to
- be infected with HIV. The study contradicts Peter Duesberg's idea that
- AIDS is a clinical development of long-term consumption of recreational
- drugs and of treatment with AZT. But Duesberg said at a recent meeting in
- London organized by a group known as the Steering Committee Against AZT
- Malpractice (SCAM), that he refused to accept the group's conclusion, and
- continued to insist that his own interpretations are sound. He continued
- to criticize the labeling of one table in the publication of the
- California study for not indicating the category of "no drug use," and
- that the paper was therefore invalid. He apparently ignored an
- explanation in the text that these subjects were represented in the
- table's category of "light" drug users. In addition, he said that he
- refused to accept the way that the results of the study were presented in
- a graph, claiming that "the curve is a fabrication and the conclusions are
- flawed." Moreover, Duesberg said that the research group's findings could
- be interpreted to support the opposite conclusion and suggested that there
- was a 100 percent correlation between AIDS and drug use.
-
- Maddox, John, Where the AIDS Virus Hides Away, Nature (03/25/93) Vol. 362,
- No. 6418, P. 287.
-
- Because of the new findings that HIV replicates in the lymph nodes while
- in the so-called latent period, Professor Peter Duesberg of the University
- of California--Berkeley may want to change his position, writes John
- Maddox of Nature. Duesberg has held that drug taking is responsible for
- AIDS, and not HIV. Most viruses are DNA viruses, which ordinarily
- replicate within cells by hijacking the preexisting machinery of DNA
- transcription and translation. But the genomes of retroviruses, like HIV,
- by contrast, consist of RNA. Those of the lentiviruses, of which HIV is
- one, come equipped with a gene specifying a reverse transcriptase (for
- converting RNA into the complementary DNA). While the RNA genome may be
- used, as if it were one of the infected cell's own messenger molecules, to
- generate the proteins that would allow an intact virus particle to be
- regenerated, by far the more efficient means of replication is that DNA
- complementary to the viral RNA should be incorporated in the genome of the
- cell, where it will serve as a template for the production of its own
- genomic RNA and thus for intact viral particles. Duesberg claims that it
- is difficult to recover from helper T lymphocytes, whose attrition for
- many patients indicates the onset of overt AIDS, virus particles that
- might plausibly infect others. The new findings show that the virus is
- alive and well in the lymph nodes, among other locations, of those
- infected with HIV. The recent revelations suggest that, nevertheless, the
- alternatives for AIDS patients are even less justifiable than seemed
- likely a few years ago. Duesberg should now admit the possibility that he
- has been mistaken, concludes Maddox.
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Question 5.4. Contaminated polio vaccine? (please contribute)
-
- (please contribute to this FAQ)
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Question 5.5. Who is Lorraine Day? (please contribute)
-
- (please contribute to this FAQ)
-
-