Natsag Javzandulam, Erlandson Kristine M, Sellmeyer Deborah E, Haberlen Sabina A, Margolick Joseph, Jacobson Lisa P, Palella Frank J, Koletar Susan L, Lake Jordan E, Post Wendy S, Brown Todd T
Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, United States of America.
University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 Jan 6;12(1):e0169184. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0169184. eCollection 2017.
Lower muscle density on computed tomography (CT) provides a measure of fatty infiltration of muscle, an aspect of muscle quality that has been associated with metabolic abnormalities, weakness, decreased mobility, and increased fracture risk in older adults. We assessed the cross-sectional relationship between HIV serostatus, age, thigh muscle attenuation, and thigh muscle cross-sectional area (CSA).
Mean CT-quantified Hounsfield units (HU) of the thigh muscle bundle and CSA were evaluated in 368 HIV-infected and 145 HIV-uninfected men enrolled in the Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study (MACS) Cardiovascular Substudy using multivariable linear regression. Models all were adjusted for HIV serostatus, age, race, and body mass index (BMI); each model was further adjusted for covariates that differed by HIV serostatus, including insulin resistance, hepatitis C, malignancy, smoking, alcohol use, and self-reported limitation in physical activity.
HIV-infected men had greater thigh muscle CSA (p<0.001) but lower muscle density (p<0.001) compared to HIV-uninfected men. Muscle density remained lower in HIV-infected men (p = 0.001) when abdominal visceral adiposity, and thigh subcutaneous adipose tissue area were substituted for BMI in a multivariable model. Muscle density decreased by 0.16 HU per year (p<0.001) of increasing age among the HIV-infected men, but not in the HIV-uninfected men (HIV x age interaction -0.20 HU; p = 0.002).
HIV-infected men had lower thigh muscle density compared to HIV-uninfected men, and a more pronounced decline with increasing age, indicative of greater fatty infiltration. These findings suggest that lower muscle quality among HIV-infected persons may be a risk factor for impairments in physical function with aging.
计算机断层扫描(CT)显示的较低肌肉密度可衡量肌肉的脂肪浸润情况,而肌肉质量的这一方面与老年人的代谢异常、虚弱、活动能力下降及骨折风险增加有关。我们评估了HIV血清学状态、年龄、大腿肌肉衰减和大腿肌肉横截面积(CSA)之间的横断面关系。
在多中心艾滋病队列研究(MACS)心血管亚研究中,对368名感染HIV的男性和145名未感染HIV的男性进行了评估,使用多变量线性回归分析大腿肌肉束的平均CT定量亨氏单位(HU)和CSA。所有模型均根据HIV血清学状态、年龄、种族和体重指数(BMI)进行了调整;每个模型还根据因HIV血清学状态而异的协变量进行了进一步调整,这些协变量包括胰岛素抵抗、丙型肝炎、恶性肿瘤、吸烟、饮酒以及自我报告的身体活动受限情况。
与未感染HIV的男性相比,感染HIV的男性大腿肌肉CSA更大(p<0.001),但肌肉密度更低(p<0.001)。在多变量模型中,当用腹部内脏脂肪量和大腿皮下脂肪组织面积替代BMI时,感染HIV的男性肌肉密度仍然较低(p = 0.001)。在感染HIV的男性中,年龄每增加一岁,肌肉密度下降0.16 HU(p<0.001),而在未感染HIV的男性中则没有这种情况(HIV与年龄的交互作用为-0.20 HU;p = 0.002)。
与未感染HIV的男性相比,感染HIV的男性大腿肌肉密度较低,且随着年龄增长下降更为明显,这表明脂肪浸润程度更高。这些发现表明,感染HIV者较低的肌肉质量可能是其随着年龄增长身体功能受损的一个危险因素。