Nutritional status and food intake in human immunodeficiency virus infection. GI/HIV Study Group

Autor: Sj, Sharkey, Keith Sharkey, Lr, Sutherland, Dl, Church
Rok vydání: 1992
Předmět:
Zdroj: Europe PubMed Central
ISSN: 0894-9255
Popis: Nutritional status and food intake of HIV+ and HIV- homosexual men that were free from enteric pathogens were compared. Food intake (7-day weighed record), anthropometry, and D-xylose excretion were measured in 44 patients (9 HIV-, 35 HIV+). HIV+ patients were found to be thinner, based on anthropometric measurements of skinfold thickness (p0.05) and percentage body fat (p0.05), and they also tended to be lighter than the HIV- patients. No differences were observed in the arm muscle mass or the food intake of the two groups. In the HIV+ patients, regression analysis was used to correlate changes in nutritional status with progression of the disease, using CD4+ lymphocyte count as a measure of severity. A decrease in CD4 count positively correlated with a decrease in weight (r = 0.48, p0.01), body mass index (r = 0.41, p0.05), and arm muscle area (r = 0.42, p0.01). Energy intake (r = 0.67, p0.01), serum albumin (r = 0.52, p0.01), and D-xylose excretion (r = 0.57, p0.0001) also positively correlated with CD4 count. Multiple regression analysis revealed a relationship between CD4 count, weight, and energy intake, indicating that as the disease progresses, a decline in weight is seen parallel to a reduction in food intake. These data indicate that changes in body composition and nutritional status are present throughout the stages of HIV disease, though no causal relationships can be interpreted from this study. The initial changes appear to be due to loss of fat stores, as determined by anthropometry.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Databáze: OpenAIRE