
Sample blood collection tube with HIV test label on HIV infection screening test form.
Argentine mother heals from HIV with no medication

Sopuruchi Onwuka
A woman in Argentina whose identity scientists did not disclose have battled off the dreaded human immune-deficiency virus (HIV) which causes the killer Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS).

According to American medical and health scientists who monitored the woman, the cure followed the victim’s blood’s natural capacity to fight the virus which kills by mass extermination of human immune agents.
She did not also take the novel stem cell transplant.

The unnamed woman would be the second person on earth to naturally cured of HIV so far in the battle against the disease. The first person to have healed naturally of the ravaging virus is Loreen Willenburg of San Francisco whose viral load zeroed out in 2020.
The argentine woman and Loreen Willenburg remain the only HIV cases that ended in sterilizing cure without a medical intervention. They are now described by scientists as “elite controllers,” a small subset of HIV patients whose immune systems naturally suppress the virus.
Other people who are medically relieved of the disease in Berlin, Germany and in London, United Kingdom received stem cell transplants; a process described by medical experts as risky.
An article published Monday in the Annals of Internal Medicine has it that the unnamed woman living in Argentina was diagnosed with HIV in 2013 but the virus suddenly disappeared from her system, confounding scientist who launched fresh search for traces of the virus in her blood as she continued to bear children.
Researchers from different countries who participated in the investigation of the case scanned through the woman’s DNA for traced of the virus since 2017 and even checked her placenta after she gave birth in March 2020. After sequencing billions of cells, the scientists have confirmed that the woman is HIV-free.