Resources

Article or Presentation

2002-Patrick_Nelson-Alan_Perelson-Mathematical_analysis_of_delay_differential _equation_models_of_HIV-1_infection

Author(s): Patrick Nelson

NA

Keywords: delay HIV-1 T cells combination antiviral therapy

124 total view(s), 33 download(s)

Abstract

Resource Image Models of HIV-1 infection that include intracellular delays are more accurate representations of the biology and change the estimated values of kinetic parameters when compared to models without delays.

Citation

Researchers should cite this work as follows:

Article Context

Resource Type
Differential Equation Type
Technique
Qualitative Analysis
Application Area
Course
Course Level
Lesson Length
Technology
Approach
Skills

Description

Nelson, Patrick W. and Alan S. Perelson. 2002. Mathematical analysis of delay differential equation models of HIV-1 infection. Mathematical Biosciences. 179: 73–94.

Article Abstract: Models of HIV-1 infection that include intracellular delays are more accurate representations of the biology and change the estimated values of kinetic parameters when compared to models without delays. We develop and analyze a set of models that include intracellular delays, combination antiretroviral therapy, and the dynamics of both infected and uninfected T cells. We show that when the drug efficacy is less than perfect the estimated value of the loss rate of productively infected T cells, d, is increased when data is .t with delay models compared to the values estimated with a non-delay model. We provide a mathematical justification for this increased value of d. We also provide some general results on the stability of non-linear delay differential equation infection models.

The paper offers a good literature survey of use of delay differential equations in modeling biological phenomena and then moves to modification of a nonlinear system of differential equations for various types of cells in the HIV-1 infection process. A delay model is offered with full stability analysis showing for reasonable delays the stability of the delay system is the same as that of the non-delay system. The authors offer parameter estimation for several patients’ data and the claims of the abstract are justified in the details of the analyses.

Keywords: HIV-1; Delay differential equations; combination antiviral therapy; T cells; stability analysis.

 

 

Article Files

Authors

Author(s): Patrick Nelson

NA

Comments

Comments

There are no comments on this resource.