Peter H. Duesberg
University of California, Berkeley
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Journal of Biosciences | 2003
Peter H. Duesberg; Claus Koehnlein; David Rasnick
In 1981 a new epidemic of about two-dozen heterogeneous diseases began to strike non-randomly growing numbers of male homosexuals and mostly male intravenous drug users in the US and Europe. Assuming immunodeficiency as the common denominator the US Centers for Disease Control (CDC) termed the epidemic, AIDS, for acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. From 1981-1984 leading researchers including those from the CDC proposed that recreational drug use was the cause of AIDS, because of exact correlations and of drug-specific diseases. However, in 1984 US government researchers proposed that a virus, now termed human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), is the cause of the non-random epidemics of the US and Europe but also of a new, sexually random epidemic in Africa. The virus-AIDS hypothesis was instantly accepted, but it is burdened with numerous paradoxes, none of which could be resolved by 2003: Why is there no HIV in most AIDS patients, only antibodies against it? Why would HIV take 10 years from infection to AIDS? Why is AIDS not self-limiting via antiviral immunity? Why is there no vaccine against AIDS? Why is AIDS in the US and Europe not random like other viral epidemics? Why did AIDS not rise and then decline exponentially owing to antiviral immunity like all other viral epidemics? Why is AIDS not contagious? Why would only HIV carriers get AIDS who use either recreational or anti-HIV drugs or are subject to malnutrition? Why is the mortality of HIV-antibody-positives treated with anti-HIV drugs 7–9%, but that of all (mostly untreated) HIV-positives globally is only 1–4%? Here we propose that AIDS is a collection of chemical epidemics, caused by recreational drugs, anti-HIV drugs, and malnutrition. According to this hypothesis AIDS is not contagious, not immunogenic, not treatable by vaccines or antiviral drugs, and HIV is just a passenger virus. The hypothesis explains why AIDS epidemics strike non-randomly if caused by drugs and randomly if caused by malnutrition, why they manifest in drug- and malnutrition-specific diseases, and why they are not self-limiting via anti-viral immunity. The hypothesis predicts AIDS prevention by adequate nutrition and abstaining from drugs, and even cures by treating AIDS diseases with proven medications.
Archive | 1996
Peter H. Duesberg
Foreword P.H. Duesberg. A Critical Analysis of the HIV-T4-cell-AIDS Hypothesis E. Papadopulos-Eleopulos, et al. Factor VIII, HIV and Aids in Haemophiliacs: An Analysis of their Relationship E. Papadopulos-Eleopulos, et al. Foreign-Protein-Mediated Immunodeficiency in Hemophiliacs with and without HIV P.H. Duesberg. Critical Analysis of the Current Views on the Nature of AIDS V.L. Koliadin. Some Mathematical Considerations on HIV and AIDS M. Craddock. HIV as a Surrogate Marker for Drug Use: A Re-analysis of the San Francisco Mens Health Study B.J. Ellison, et al. A Critical Appraisal of the Vancouver Mens Study Does it Refute the Drugs/AIDS Hypothesis? M. Craddock. Duesberg and the Right of Reply According to Maddox-Nature P.H. Duesberg, H. Bialy. HIV: Science by Press Conference M. Craddock. AZT Toxicity and AIDS Prophylaxis: Is AZT Beneficial for HIV+ Asymptomatic Persons with 500 or More T4 Cells per Cubic Millimeter? M.D. Zaretsky. The Toxicity of Azidothymidine (AZT) on Human and Animal Cells in Culture at Concentrations Used for Antiviral Therapy D.T. Chui, P.H. Duesberg. Measuring Inhalant Nitrite Exposure in Gay Men: Implications for Elucidating the Etiology of AIDS-Related Kaposis Sarcoma H.W. Haverkos, D.P. Drotman. A Hypothetical Disease of the Immune System That May Bear Some Relation to the Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome K.B. Mullis. The Epidemiology and Transmission of AIDS: A Hypothesis Linking Behavioural and Biological Determinants to Time, Person and Place G.T. Stewart. Five Myths About AIDS that have Misdirected Research and Treatment R.S. Root-Bernstein. Semen Alloantigens and Lymphocytotoxic Antibodies in AIDS and ICL R.S. Root-Bernstein, S. Hobbs de Witt. AIDS and Good Theory-Making S. Harris. How Much Longer Can We Afford the AIDS Virus Monopoly? P.H. Duesberg. HIV and AIDS: Have we Been Misled? Questions of Scientific and Journalistic Responsibility S. Lang. To Fund or Not to Fund, That is the Question: Proposed Experiments on the Drug--AIDS Hypothesis To Inform or Not to Inform, That is Another Question S. Lang. HIV Symposium at AAAS Conference J. Lauritsen. AIDS and Poppers T. Bethell. NIDA Meeting Calls for Research into the Poppers--Kaposis Sarcoma Connection J. Lauritsen. The Thinking Problem in HIV-Science P.E. Johnson. The Incidence Quagmire J. Lauritsen. The HIV Test C. Farber. Cry, Beloved Country: How Africa Became the Victim of a Non-Existent Epidemic of HIV/AIDS N. Hodgkinson.
Cancer Research | 1987
Peter H. Duesberg
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1989
Peter H. Duesberg
Science | 1988
Peter H. Duesberg
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1991
Peter H. Duesberg
Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 1992
Peter H. Duesberg
The Lancet | 1993
Peter H. Duesberg
Science | 1993
Peter H. Duesberg
Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 1989
Peter H. Duesberg