Literature DB >> 10881368

Reversal of cachexia in patients treated with potent antiretroviral therapy.

D Scevola1, A Di Matteo, F Uberti, G Minoia, F Poletti, A Faga.   

Abstract

The introduction of HAART has changed the nutritional status of HIV patients. In the pre-protease inhibitor (PI) era, more than 60% of HIV-positive persons presented with protein energy malnutrition (PEM) and vitamin and mineral deficit. This caused progressive physical-metabolic wasting (wasting syndrome/cachexia) and increased susceptibility to opportunistic infections and drug toxicity. PEM was a concurrent cause in 80% of deaths attributed to AIDS. Since 1996, the year in which PIs were introduced, the number of patients dying as a result of AIDS has decreased by two thirds, and cachexia is no longer the AIDS terminal phase in developed countries. But different patterns of nutritional status changes have appeared in association with the use of newer anti-HIV therapies and with longer survival of HIV-infected patients. A new clinical and laboratory syndrome--lipodystrophy syndrome--now affects patients receiving PI-based therapy. This syndrome consists of changes in body shape that are caused by an abnormal redistribution of fat. Fat accumulates in the abdominal area (truncal and visceral obesity), in the axillary pads (bilateral symmetric lipomatosis), and in the dorsocervical pads ("buffalo hump," "bull neck") but decreases in the legs, arms, and nasolabial and cheek pads (peripheral lipodystrophy). Hyperlipidemia and insulin resistance are also frequently present (metabolic syndrome X). Pathogenic mechanisms of lipid and fat tissue disturbances are discussed in this article, and the clinical approach to patient management and therapeutic options for lipodystrophy and lipid dysmetabolism is evaluated.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10881368

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AIDS Read        ISSN: 1053-0894


  2 in total

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Journal:  Nutrients       Date:  2014-09-15       Impact factor: 5.717

2.  Hepatotoxicity during Treatment for Tuberculosis in People Living with HIV/AIDS.

Authors:  Carolline Araújo-Mariz; Edmundo Pessoa Lopes; Bartolomeu Acioli-Santos; Magda Maruza; Ulisses Ramos Montarroyos; Ricardo Arraes de Alencar Ximenes; Heloísa Ramos Lacerda; Demócrito de Barros Miranda-Filho; Maria de Fátima P Militão de Albuquerque
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-06-22       Impact factor: 3.240

  2 in total

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