Antiviral Agents (HIV-related) — Immune System
Enfuvirtide, Maraviroc, Zidovudine, Delavirdine, Raltegravir, Ritonavir
Welcome to the Immune System’s command network—where HIV isn’t just an “infection.” It’s a hacker that breaks into immune cells, rewrites the system, and turns the body’s defenses against itself.
In this volume, Lucy and the crew launch a multi-layer antiviral defense to stop HIV at different stages of its life cycle: block entry, stop replication, and prevent integration—so viral load drops, CD4 protection improves, and opportunistic infections lose their advantage.
What this book covers (in story form):
Entry & Fusion Blockers (Stop HIV from getting inside the cell)
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Enfuvirtide (Fuzeon) — a fusion inhibitor: blocks HIV from fusing with the host cell membrane. The story highlights injection-based use and why site reactions and adherence matter.
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Maraviroc (Selzentry) — a CCR5 antagonist: locks a “doorway receptor” HIV uses to enter certain immune cells—making tropism/entry logic easy to remember.
Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors (Stop HIV from copying itself)
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Zidovudine (Retrovir, ZDV) — an NRTI: interrupts viral DNA building. The arc emphasizes key monitoring concepts and why blood counts and side-effect awareness matter for safe therapy.
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Delavirdine (Rescriptor) — an NNRTI: blocks reverse transcriptase differently than NRTIs, with practical teaching points focused on interactions and adherence.
Integrase Inhibitor (Stop HIV from inserting into human DNA)
Protease Inhibitor / Booster (Stop assembly + strengthen the regimen)
You’ll learn through: