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Previous reports have suggested that HIV causes extensive destruction in the gastrointestinal (GI) lymph nodes just days after it has established a new infection. Such lymphatic damage potentially allows bacterial pathogens to invade the body. In previous studies, researchers have used bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) levels as a surrogate for this bacterial invasion and have shown that LPS levels are correlated with markers of HIV disease progression. These observations have been used to postulate that GI bacterial translocation induces chronic immune activation, which hastens HIV disease progression.
To further evaluate the role of bacterial translocation in HIV pathogenesis, investigators measured levels of DNA encoding bacterial riboso…