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在营养不良与艾滋病毒合并感染的背景下应对结核病

Addressing tuberculosis in the context of malnutrition and HIV coinfection.

作者信息

Semba Richard D, Darnton-Hill Ian, de Pee Saskia

机构信息

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.

出版信息

Food Nutr Bull. 2010 Dec;31(4 Suppl):S345-64.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Tuberculosis is the second leading cause of infectious disease mortality (1.8 million/year), after HIV/AIDS. There are more than 9 million new cases each year. One-third of the world's population, and 50% of adults in sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia, and South-East Asia, are infected, representing an enormous pool of individuals at risk for developing the disease. The situation is complicated by the HIV/AIDS pandemic, widespread undernutrition, smoking, diabetes, increased mobility, and emergence of multi- and extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis.

OBJECTIVE

To review the scientific evidence about the interactions among tuberculosis, nutrition, and HIV coinfection.

RESULTS

HIV infection and malnutrition lower immunity, increasing the risk of reactivation tuberculosis and primary progressive disease. Having either tuberculosis or HIV infection causes weight loss. Malnutrition markedly increases mortality among both tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS patients and should be treated concurrently with treatment of the infections. Tuberculosis treatment is a prerequisite for nutritional recovery, in addition to intake of nutrients required for rebuilding tissues, which is constrained in food-insecure households. Additional pharmaceutical treatment to reduce the catabolic impact of inflammation or promote growth may be needed. Specific nutrients can contribute to faster sputum smear clearance, which is important for reducing transmission, as well as faster weight gain when combined with an adequate diet. Adequate nutrition and weight gain in undernourished populations might reduce the incidence of tuberculosis. CONCLUSIONS; The many risk factors for the development of tuberculosis need to be addressed simultaneously, especially HIV/AIDS and food insecurity and undernutrition. For stronger evidence-based guidelines, existing recommendations and clinical applications need to be more widely applied and evaluated.

摘要

背景

结核病是仅次于艾滋病毒/艾滋病的第二大传染病致死原因(每年180万例)。每年有超过900万新发病例。全球三分之一的人口以及撒哈拉以南非洲、南亚和东南亚50%的成年人受到感染,这意味着有大量人群面临患病风险。艾滋病毒/艾滋病大流行、普遍存在的营养不良、吸烟、糖尿病、人口流动性增加以及多重耐药和广泛耐药结核病的出现使情况变得复杂。

目的

综述关于结核病、营养和艾滋病毒合并感染之间相互作用的科学证据。

结果

艾滋病毒感染和营养不良会降低免疫力,增加结核病复发和原发性进展性疾病的风险。患有结核病或艾滋病毒感染都会导致体重减轻。营养不良显著增加结核病和艾滋病毒/艾滋病患者的死亡率,应在治疗感染的同时进行治疗。结核病治疗是营养恢复的前提,此外还需要摄入重建组织所需的营养物质,而在粮食无保障的家庭中这受到限制。可能需要额外的药物治疗来减少炎症的分解代谢影响或促进生长。特定营养素有助于更快清除痰涂片,这对于减少传播很重要,并且与充足饮食相结合时有助于更快增加体重。营养不良人群获得充足营养和体重增加可能会降低结核病的发病率。结论:结核病发生的众多风险因素需要同时解决,尤其是艾滋病毒/艾滋病以及粮食无保障和营养不良问题。为了制定更有力的循证指南,现有的建议和临床应用需要更广泛地应用和评估。

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