Ruengpung SutthentPongsakdi ChaisilwattanaAnuvat RoongpisuthipongPiyanot WirachsilpKwonchid SamrangsarpPattrawan ChaiyakulPilaipan PuthavathanaChantapong WasiMahidol University2018-07-042018-07-041997-01-01Journal of the Medical Association of Thailand. Vol.80, No.6 (1997), 347-356012522082-s2.0-2542423854https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/20.500.14594/18197The uneven expansion of HIV-1 subtypes in each transmitted group raises the possibility that some viruses have less/more potential by qualitative/quantitative for heterosexual transmission compared to others. In Thailand, HTV-1 subtype E is mainly spread via heterosexual route and accounts for about 95 per cent of the infected cases. To determine whether high sexual infectivity of HIV-1 subtype E is due to the presence of a virus in genital fluid, we conducted a study to characterize shedding of HIV-1 in seminal and cervico-vaginal fluids of 30 HIV-1 subtype E infected Thai couples by PCR and virus isolation methods. All subjects had no HIV-associated diseases and other sexually transmitted diseases. HIV-1 subtype E DNA was detected in 22/30 (77.33%) of cervico-vaginal and also 22/30 (77.33%) of seminal fluid samples. The isolation rate of HIV-1 from semen and cervico-vaginal secretion was 36.67 per cent and 16.67 per cent, respectively. Number of HIV-I subtype E DNA copies in the blood is reversely correlated with the number of blood CD4+ T cells, while that in genital fluid was not related to CD4+ T cell count. An increase in shedding of HIV- DNA subtype E in female genital tract compared to other HIV subtypes reported by other investigators might be one reason to explain the rapid spread of subtype E by heterosexual transmission in Thailand.Mahidol UniversityMedicineShedding of HIV-1 Subtype E in Semen and Cervico-Vaginal FluidArticleSCOPUS