I don't know what, specifically, the biological procedure is, but an HIV-infected mother can certainly give birth to an HIV-infected child.
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roammer
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Sun 4 Nov, 2012 03:51 pm
@kumar985,
kumar985 wrote:
Can HIV virus enter the foetus through placenta?
Quote:
The placenta is an organ essential to the development of the fetus. In mammals, the fetus develops inside the body of the mother. The placenta is attached to the fetus by a cord containing blood vessels – the umbilical cord. The placenta is also firmly attached to the uterus of the mother. The role of the placenta is to bring the blood of the fetus close to the blood of the mother. This then allows oxygen and mineral salts to pass from the mother to the fetus, while carbon dioxide and other waste materials pass in the opposite direction
A variety of materials, including drugs and viruses, can pass across the placenta and enter the fetus. HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, can be transmitted in this way. However, the mother provides some protection against infection. There are chemicals that the mother makes to defend against disease that can cross into the fetus, such as some antibodies.