不同类型运动对hiv感染者身体成分和脂肪分布的影响:简要综述

Florin M Malita, Antony D Karelis, Emil Toma, Remi Rabasa-Lhoret
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引用次数: 38

摘要

艾滋病毒感染及其治疗与不利的代谢和形态异常有关。这些代谢异常,特别是身体组成和脂肪分布的改变,可能会增加心血管和代谢并发症的风险,并降低功能独立性和自尊心。因此,迫切需要开发干预措施,以管理艾滋病毒或抗逆转录病毒治疗相关并发症的继发性副作用。在接受多种治疗的患者中,非药物干预是合乎逻辑的第一步。特别是运动训练可以通过有利地改变身体组成和体脂分布模式,帮助减轻与抗逆转录病毒治疗相关的一些代谢不良反应。研究表明,运动训练,特别是有氧训练,可以帮助减少全身和内脏脂肪,并使艾滋病毒感染患者的脂质谱正常化。然而,阻力训练的结果却不那么确定。了解抗阻和有氧训练的使用及其对胰岛素抵抗和脂肪细胞因子的影响,可能是治疗接受适当抗逆转录病毒治疗的艾滋病毒感染者代谢并发症的有效非药物手段。在这篇简短的综述中,我们研究了有氧和阻力训练对身体成分、体脂分布和选定代谢结果的影响。
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Effects of different types of exercise on body composition and fat distribution in HIV-infected patients: a brief review.

HIV infection and its treatment is associated with unfavourable metabolic and morphological abnormalities. These metabolic abnormalities, particularly alterations in body composition and fat distribution, may increase the risk for cardiovascular and metabolic complications, as well as reduce functional independence and lower self-esteem. Thus there is an urgent need to develop interventions intended to manage secondary side effects of HIV or antiretroviral therapy-related complications. In poly-treated patients, nonpharmacological interventions are a logical first step. Exercise training in particular may help alleviate some of the metabolic adverse effects associated with antiretroviral therapy by favourably altering body composition and patterns of body fat distribution. Studies have shown that exercise training, particularly aerobic training, can help reduce total body and visceral fat, as well as normalizing lipid profiles in HIV-infected patients. The results for resistance training, however, are less conclusive. Knowledge of the use of resistance and aerobic training and its attendant effects on insulin resistance and adipocytokines may represent an effective nonpharmacologic means for treating metabolic complications of HIV-infected persons who are receiving appropriate antiretroviral therapy. In this brief review we examine the effects of aerobic and resistance training on body composition, body fat distribution, and selected metabolic outcomes.

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