Chemicals found in bananas are better at preventing HIV than
two current synthetic anti-HIV drugs, according to new study.
Your favorite oblong
fruit might be even healthier than you realized. According to The Gazette
(Montreal) newspaper, a new study has found that chemicals commonly found in
bananas are as potent in preventing HIV as two synthetic anti-HIV drugs.
Researchers say the findings could lead to a cheap new component for applied
microbicides that prevent intimate transmission of HIV.
"The problem
with some HIV drugs is that the virus can mutate and become resistant, but
that's much harder to do in the presence of lectins," said lead author
Michael D. Swanson. "Lectins can bind to the sugars found on different
spots of the HIV-1 envelope, and presumably it will take multiple mutations for
the virus to get around them."
Swanson and his
colleagues noted that even modest success in developing BanLec into a womanly
or BehindBased microbicide could save millions of lives. In fact, 20 percent
coverage with a microbicide that is only 60 percent effective against HIV may
prevent up to 2.5 million HIV infections in three years. Furthermore, a BanLec
ointment would be much cheaper to produce and distribute than most current
anti-retroviral medications that require the production of synthetic
components.
One thing's for sure:
new ways of stopping the transmission of HIV are desperately needed. Condoms
are effective, but they are often used incorrectly or inconsistently, and in
many cultures and developing countries women are not always in control of their
intimate encounters. The introduction of a cheap, long-lasting, self-applied
ointment derived naturally from bananas could change all of that.
Courtesy of: http://www.mnn.com/health/fitness-well-being/stories/bananas-prevent-hiv-infectionhttp://www.mnn.com/health/fitness-well-being/stories/bananas-prevent-hiv-infection
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