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What is acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS)?

Common Questions (Preconception, Fertility, Pregnancy, Labor...
A person with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) who develops an infection, rare cancer, dementia, a wasting syndrome or other infection that has been identified in a laboratory has AIDS. The average length of time between becoming infected with HIV and developing AIDS is about 10 years.
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What is AIDS? What is Acquired Immunodeficiency Virus?

Frequently Asked Questions - Disease Prevention & Epidemiolo...
AIDS: Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome: AIDS is the late stage of an infection caused by the Human Immunodeficiency Virus, or HIV. AIDS is a complex disease characterized by severe damage to the body's natural immune system. A person with AIDS becomes susceptible to unusual opportunistic diseases and cancers that are not ordinarily a threat to people with normal immune systems.
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What is AIDS?

Frequent Questions
AIDS stands for acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. AIDS is the final stage of HIV infection. It can take years for a person infected with HIV, even without treatment, to reach this stage. Having AIDS means that the virus has weakened the immune system to the point at which the body has a difficult time fighting infections. When someone has one or more of these infections and a low number of T cells, he or she has AIDS.
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AIDS Athens | HIV/AIDS Frequently Asked Questions
AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome) is the most serious stage of HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus) infection. It results from the destruction of the infected person's immune system. Your immune system is your body's defense system. Cells of your immune system fight off infection and other diseases. If your immune system does not work well, you are at risk for serious and life-threatening infections and cancers.
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American Social Health Association - Learn about STDs/STIs
A diagnosis of AIDS (acquired immunodeficiency syndrome) is made by a physician. An HIV-infected person may be diagnosed with AIDS if he or she meets certain clinical criteria. Criteria include becoming sick with an illness defined by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) as an AIDS-indicator illness (illnesses that take advantage of the body's weakened immune system) and/or by taking a blood test that shows that the person's immune system is severely damaged.
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Cable Positive HIV/AIDS Information
AIDS stands for acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. A person first becomes HIV infected and later, in most cases, develops AIDS. HIV can weaken the immune system to the point that it has difficulty fighting off "opportunistic" infections (infections that are usually controlled by a healthy immune system). A person receives an AIDS diagnosis from a doctor after developing one or more specific opportunistic infections, also known as AIDS indicator illnesses.
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Frequently Asked Questions about HIV/AIDS
AIDS is short for Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome. The AIDS virus is called human immunodeficiency virus, or HIV. The HIV virus can enter the body and infect cells which provide a natural immunity against certain diseases. As the HIV virus infects and kills these white blood cells, the body's defense system breaks down.
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HIV Frequently Asked Questions - Southern Nevada Health Dist...
AIDS stands for acquired immune deficiency syndrome. Acquired means you can get infected with it; Immune Deficiency means a weakness in the body's system that fights diseases; and Syndrome means a group of health problems that make up a condition.
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How are trademark rights acquired?

Trademark FAQ's
Trademark rights are not acquired through the registration process. Common law ownership rights are acquired through actual use of the mark in commerce. Generally, the first person to use a trademark is the first person to acquire rights to the mark.
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What is a hospital-acquired infection?

Austin Health DeBug Infection Prevention Program - Frequentl...
infection that a patient acquires during their hospital stay, specifically where the infection commences 48-hours after admission (e.g. MRSA surgical site infection).
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Acquired Immunity: What Can We Do?

Table of Contents
Next we have acquired immunity, which is when you acquire (thus the name) the immunity either from being given the antibodies from another person or a vaccine to prevent or treat your disease. This is also when you have previously had an infection and you have fought it off. You see, B cells and T cells in the body remember and recognize the returning infection and have the ability to defeat it before you take ill with it again.
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What is Asperger's Syndrome?

Autism Society of America: Autism FAQ
What distinguishes Asperger's Syndrome from autism is the severity of the symptoms and the absence of language delays. Children with Asperger's may be only mildly affected and frequently have good language and cognitive skills. To the untrained observer, a child with Asperger's may seem just like a normal child behaving differently. They may be socially awkward, not understanding of conventional social rules, or show a lack of empathy.
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What is an epileptic syndrome?

UC Davis Comprehensive Epilepsy Program - FAQ about epilepsy
Until recently, neurologists classified the types of seizures, such as focal or generalized convulsive. The past few decades, research has leaned toward determining if the patient has an epileptic syndrome, or a specific type occurring under certain conditions. These conditions could include a particular clinical setting at a certain age with other accompanying findings like radiological tests and EEGs. Absence--or petit mal--seizures can illustrate the value of a syndrome approach.
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What is a Syndrome?

CdLS USA Foundation: Facts About CdLS
Syndrome" is a medical term for a condition in which there is a collection of signs (observable body changes) and symptoms (problems observed by the patient) recognizable by a doctor's exam. Individuals with a syndrome may not have all of its associated signs and symptoms, but they must have enough to be considered "diagnostic." Conversely, because someone may display some of the signs and symptoms of a syndrome, does not necessarily mean they have it.
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What is HELLP Syndrome?

Preeclampsia FAQ
HELLP Syndrome occurs in 4 percent to 12 percent of the women who have preeclampsia. It is one of the most severe forms of preeclampsia. HELLP stands for: hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, and lowered platelets. HELLP Syndrome most often affects the liver, causing stomach and right shoulder pain. HELLP Syndrome is most dangerous because it can occur before you exhibit the classic symptoms of preeclampsia. It is often mistaken for the flu or gallbladder problems.
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Is Down syndrome inherited?

Down Syndrome: FAQ
Only 3 to 5% of cases are inherited; the rest arise as an accident of chromosome arrangement during meiosis. For details, see my essay on the origin of trisomy 21 or Dr. Paul Benke's essay on the types of DS, and the risk and recurrence risk of DS. No. Down syndrome occurs at conception, so nothing in the pregnancy can cause Down syndrome to occur. As for prior to conception, the research all shows that drug or alcohol use does not increase the risk of having a child with DS.
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What is Tourette Syndrome?

Tourette Syndrome FAQ
Tourette Syndrome TS) is a neurological disorder characterized by tics -- involuntary, rapid, sudden movements or vocalizations that occur repeatedly in the same way.
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What are the symptoms for AIDS?

San Francisco AIDS Foundation: Frequently Asked Questions Ab...
There are no common symptoms for individuals diagnosed with AIDS. When immune system damage is more severe, people may experience opportunistic infections (called "opportunistic" because they are caused by organisms which cannot induce disease in people with normal immune systems, but take the "opportunity" to flourish in people with HIV). Most of these more severe infections, diseases and symptoms fall under the Centers for Disease Control's definition of full-blown "AIDS.
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What Is HIV/AIDS?

HIV/AIDS: Frequently Asked Questions - The Body
HIV (Human Immunodeficiency ["im-you-no-de-fish-en-see"] Virus -- is the virus that causes AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome). HIV attacks and kills the cells in our bodies that keep us from getting diseases. This makes people with HIV get illnesses that healthy people do not get. When a person with HIV gets very sick from pneumonia, some kinds of cancer, and other life-threatening diseases, they are said to have AIDS. AIDS is a fatal disease. Here is more information on HIV/AIDS.
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Ministry of Health
Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) is a disease in which the body's natural immune (protection) system breaks down, leaving it unable to fight off infections. A person with AIDS gets illnesses that are little or no threat to others with a healthy immune system.
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