Insidious HIV: Dr. Masci Shares Story of AIDS through the Decades
Finding Genius Podcast
Richard Jacobs
4.4 • 1K Ratings
🗓️ 6 November 2020
⏱️ 35 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Joseph R. Masci began his time at Mt. Sinai when doctors were first confronted with HIV patients who had developed AIDs. He brings his intimate knowledge of this treatment and its evolving history to listeners in this episode.
Listeners will learn
- What doctors met at the bedside of an AIDS patient in terms of opportunistic infections and how the medical community became a second family to those suffering,
- How this retrovirus works through reverse transcriptase and a decades-long latency period, and
- How treatments and HIV prevention evolved into today's effective combination on an infectious disease microbiology level.
Joseph R Masci is a clinical professor in the Infectious Diseases, Environmental Medicine and Public Health, and Global Health divisions at Mount Sinai. He started his training at Mount Sinai in 1980 when experts in infectious diseases were first confronted with a rapidly expanding population of AIDs patients. Imagine facing large numbers of HIV patients with no antiretroviral drugs available and no effective treatment for at least 10 years down the road.
He and his colleagues offered emotional support in addition to soothing the opportunistic infections that the virus enabled. They created a special area, a "living room" in their hospital for these patients who were isolated from their families and became their second families. They put on concerts and memorial services for them. He says that the epidemic was "sudden, tragic and not treatable like today."
Because Dr. Masci was in it for the long haul, he's able to explain to listeners each stage of advancing treatment and an eventual measure for preventing the transmission of HIV. Along the way he explains the mechanics of infectious viruses, how HIV has especially insidious traits through its ability to become part of infected person's DNA and its long latency period. As with other common infectious diseases like Epstein Barr, once a person has it, they can't get rid of it.
He talks listeners through treatments like AZT, nucleosides, and the effective protease inhibitor drugs. He makes the vital point that much of the world doesn't have access to these very effective drugs and that many still die from AIDs in low income countries. He then is able to take the basics he's established through the podcast and establish some comparisons with COVID-19 and its treatment. Listen in for some of the most important medical history of our time.
For more about his work, find his publications in PubMed and ResearchGate.
Available on Apple Podcasts: apple.co/2Os0myK
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Forget frequently asked questions common sense common knowledge or Google how about advice from a real genius |
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| 0:27.2 | ketogenic diets, and more. |
| 0:28.8 | Here come the geniuses. |
| 0:30.4 | This is the Finding Genius Podcast. |
| 0:33.0 | That is Richard Jacobs. |
| 0:35.0 | Hello, this is Richard Jacobs with the Finding Genius Podcast. |
| 0:41.0 | I have a returning guest Joseph Joseph R. Mashey. |
| 0:44.3 | He's a clinical professor. |
| 0:45.6 | He goes with medicine, infectious diseases, |
| 0:48.2 | environmental medicine and public health, |
| 0:49.9 | more so these days. |
| 0:51.4 | He had written several books on HIV and worked on it quite extensively. That's what I wanted to talk to him about today. Although again, his focus has changed a little bit recently, but he's at Mount Sinai and Joseph thanks for coming. |
| 1:05.8 | My pleasure. Thank you. Yeah. If you would again, it's going back a little bit in your timeline, |
| 1:10.8 | but tell me about how you first encountered AIDS and HIV and |
| 1:15.6 | what led to work on it for so long. |
| 1:18.0 | Well I started my training and infectious diseases at Mount Sinai in 1980 and this was the year where the initial cases of what turned out to be |
| 1:27.6 | Later recognized as AIDS were identified there were some in New York. I had one of those patients there were some in New York. I had one of those patients. There were some in Los Angeles. It was originally thought to be confined to gay men. |
| 1:38.0 | Then it quickly became apparent that that was not the only group at risk. |
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