The essence of cocktail therapy is mixing medicines.
Cocktail therapy, originally referred to as "highly effective antiretroviral therapy" (HAART), was introduced by Chinese-American biologist Daiyi He in 1996, and is based on the synergistic application of three or more antiretroviral medications in the treatment of AIDS.
The use of this treatment can reduce drug resistance caused by a single drug, maximize the suppression of viral replication, so that some or even all of the destroyed immune function of the body to repair, and thus slow down the progress of the current history of the disease, to increase the patient's life, and improve the quality of life.
This treatment mixes trypsin moderators with a variety of antiviral drugs to achieve reasonable control of AIDS.
More and more biologists are convinced that drug-mixing is the most effective treatment for AIDS, both in terms of stopping the HIV virus from reproducing and preventing the body from developing drug-resistant viral infections. In recent years, some people have been calling similar drug therapy a "cocktail therapy" for other conditions.
Precautions for cocktail therapy:
The use of cocktail therapy to get good results, but also to avoid drug resistance, the patient should have good compliance. AIDS patients have strict requirements for the time and amount of medication, must adhere to the medication, and the time of the two doses must be consistent, even if there is a deviation can not be too large, during the medication, but also regular monitoring of the viral load, and actively prevent drug resistance.