Submitted by robotisland t3_105aeln in askscience
Leishmania is a protozan parasite that attacks immune cells and causes leishmaniasis. Since it also damages the ability of the immune system to protect against infection, why is leishmania less dangerous than HIV?
Does it have something to do with the speed at which leishmania can reproduce?
Why is there an AIDS pandemic but not a leishmaniasis pandemic?
Since leishmania can infect vertebrates and be spread by insects (and HIV can only infect humans and can't be spread by insects), what makes leishmania less infectious than HIV?
What makes leishmaniasis an easier disease to treat than AIDS?
Does the immune system have any defenses against leishmania?
If left untreated, what are the chances that someone infected with leishmania will recover?
NerdWithoutACause t1_j3airig wrote
HIV is a retrovirus, meaning it inserts its genetic code into the host cells. So not only do those cells make the virus, but all their descendants will, as well. This makes HIV almost impossible to eradicate from the host.
We have drug treatments for leishmaniasis which are extremely effective, and once it’s out of your body, it’s gone for good. With HIV, we have treatments that can inhibit the virus’s spread inside the body, but the infect cells and their progeny are still infected, and will remain so for decades. If the treatment is stopped, the infection will resume in full force.
So basically, leishmaniasis is easily curable in most cases, but HIV is not.