Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Diego, San Diego, USA,
J Neurovirol. 2013 Oct;19(5):410-7. doi: 10.1007/s13365-013-0184-8. Epub 2013 Aug 10.
Neurocognitive impairment (NCI) remains prevalent in HIV infection. Randomized trials have shown that physical exercise improves NCI in non-HIV-infected adults, but data on HIV-infected populations are limited. Community-dwelling HIV-infected participants (n = 335) completed a comprehensive neurocognitive battery that was utilized to define both global and domain-specific NCI. Participants were divided into "exercise" (n = 83) and "no exercise" (n = 252) groups based on whether they self-reported engaging in any activity that increased heart rate in the last 72 h or not. We also measured and evaluated a series of potential confounding factors, including demographics, HIV disease characteristics, substance use and psychiatric comorbidities, and physical functioning. Lower rates of global NCI were observed among the exercise group (15.7 %) as compared to those in the no exercise group (31.0 %; p < 0.01). A multivariable logistic regression controlling for potential confounds (i.e., education, AIDS status, current CD4+ lymphocyte count, self-reported physical function, current depression) showed that being in the exercise group remained significantly associated with lower global NCI (odds ratio = 2.63, p < 0.05). Similar models of domain-specific NCI showed that exercise was associated with reduced impairment in working memory (p < 0.05) and speed of information processing (p < 0.05). The present findings suggest that HIV-infected adults who exercise are approximately half as likely to show NCI as compared to those who do not. Future longitudinal studies might be best suited to address causality, and intervention trials in HIV-infected individuals will determine whether exercise can prevent or ameliorate NCI in this population.
神经认知障碍(NCI)在 HIV 感染中仍然普遍存在。随机试验表明,体育锻炼可改善非 HIV 感染者的 NCI,但 HIV 感染者的数据有限。居住在社区的 HIV 感染者参与者(n=335)完成了全面的神经认知测试,用于定义整体和特定领域的 NCI。参与者根据他们在过去 72 小时内是否报告进行任何增加心率的活动,分为“运动”(n=83)和“不运动”(n=252)组。我们还测量和评估了一系列潜在的混杂因素,包括人口统计学、HIV 疾病特征、物质使用和精神共病以及身体功能。与不运动组(31.0%)相比,运动组的整体 NCI 发生率较低(15.7%;p<0.01)。在控制潜在混杂因素(即教育、艾滋病状况、当前 CD4+淋巴细胞计数、自我报告的身体功能、当前抑郁)的多变量逻辑回归中,运动组与较低的整体 NCI 显著相关(比值比=2.63,p<0.05)。针对特定领域的 NCI 的类似模型表明,运动与工作记忆(p<0.05)和信息处理速度(p<0.05)的损伤减少相关。这些发现表明,与不运动的 HIV 感染者相比,运动的 HIV 感染者发生 NCI 的可能性大约降低一半。未来的纵向研究可能最适合解决因果关系,而在 HIV 感染者中进行的干预试验将确定运动是否可以预防或改善该人群的 NCI。