摘要

In this paper, a chronic viral infection model with cell-mediated immunity and immune impairment is proposed and studied, under the assumption that the presence of the antigen can both stimulate and impair immunity. It is shown that the virus persists in the host if the basic reproductive ratio of the virus is greater than 1. The immune cells persist when there is only one positive equilibrium. The system can exhibit two positive equilibria if the basic reproductive ratio of the virus is above a threshold. This allows a bistable behavior, and the immune cells persist or die out, i.e., infection will result in disease or immune control outcome, depending on the initial conditions. By theoretical analysis and numerical simulations, we show that therapy could shift the patient from a disease progression to an immune control outcome, despite that the therapy is not necessarily lifelong. This would allow the immune response to control the virus in the long term even in the absence of continued therapy.