Stochastic population switch may explain the latent reservoir stability and intermittent viral blips in HIV patients on suppressive therapy
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Publication:739681
DOI10.1016/j.jtbi.2014.06.042zbMath1343.92285OpenAlexW1976952734WikidataQ42206609 ScholiaQ42206609MaRDI QIDQ739681
Publication date: 19 August 2016
Published in: Journal of Theoretical Biology (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jtbi.2014.06.042
Related Items (12)
Dynamics of an HIV model with multiple infection stages and treatment with different drug classes ⋮ Stochastic modelling of viral blips in HIV-1-infected patients: effects of inhomogeneous density fluctuations ⋮ Periodic Solutions of an Infected-Age Structured HIV Model with the Latent Factor and Different Transmission Modes ⋮ A stochastic delay model of HIV pathogenesis with reactivation of latent reservoirs ⋮ HIV infection dynamics and viral rebound: modeling results from humanized mice ⋮ Analysis of HIV models with two time delays ⋮ An HIV model with age-structured latently infected cells ⋮ The role of CD4 T cells in immune system activation and viral reproduction in a simple model for HIV infection ⋮ Immuno-modulatory strategies for reduction of HIV reservoir cells ⋮ Modeling HIV dynamics under combination therapy with inducers and antibodies ⋮ Dynamics of a new HIV model with the activation status of infected cells ⋮ Analysis of an HIV model with post-treatment control
Cites Work
- Opportunistic infection as a cause of transient viremia in chronically infected HIV patients under treatment with HAART
- Monte Carlo estimates of natural variation in HIV infection
- Asymmetric division of activated latently infected cells may explain the decay kinetics of the HIV-1 latent reservoir and intermittent viral blips
- Modeling HIV persistence, the latent reservoir, and viral blips
- Latently infected cell activation: a way to reduce the size of the HIV reservoir?
- Dynamics of HIV infection of CD4\(^ +\) T cells
- Conditions for Transient Viremia in Deterministic in-Host Models: Viral Blips Need No Exogenous Trigger
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