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The untold Side of the movie "Dallas Buyers Club"
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Exhorbitant Price New Hepatitis C Drug
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Six Promising HIV Drugs in the Pipeline (2013-2014)
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What Can We Look Forward to in HIV Cure Research
TheBodyPRO.com's Nelson Vergel sat down with leading HIV cure research activist Richard Jefferys for an update on current important aspects, and controversies, in HIV cure research....
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What Supplements Can I take with HIV medications?
Is it ok to supplement with Creatine (Cell-Tech), and Protein (Nitro-Tech) along with Glutamine...
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Mitochondrial damage in adipose tissue of untreated HIV-infected patients.
Thursday, May 27, 2010
Vitamin and Mineral Use in HIV- Summary of Studies
Reference | Study design, location, and population | Vitamin concentrations1 | Results and conclusions |
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Cross-sectional studies | |||
Toma et al, 2001 (93) | Cross-sectional study in Canada. 11 HIV-positive adults (6 receiving HAART for ![]() | Vitamin A: HAART (51 ± 5 µg/dL); no HIV medications (66 ± 11 µg/dL) | Mean plasma concentrations of vitamin A and retinol-binding protein were significantly lower (P = 0.03) and higher (P = 0.04), respectively, in those receiving HAART. |
Rousseau et al, 2000 (94) | Cross-sectional study in France. 30 HIV-positive adults, mostly injection-drug users (23 receiving HAART for ![]() | Vitamin A: total (0.66 ± 1.2 µmol/L); 24 of 30 (80%) deficient (<1.5 µmol/L); concentrations not presented for HAART and non-HAART groups Vitamin E: total (9.24 ± 3.4 mg/L); 10 of 29 (34%) deficient (<6 mg/L); concentrations not presented for HAART and non-HAART groups | Mean plasma concentrations of vitamins A and E were not significantly different between those with a CD4 count < and >250 cells/µL, between those with viral load > and <5000 copies/mL, and between those receiving and not receiving HAART. |
Tang et al, 2000 (95) | Cross-sectional study in the United States. 175 HIV-positive injection-drug users (30 receiving HAART, 65 receiving dual- or monotherapy, 80 not receiving any HIV medications). | ![]() ![]() ![]() | Adjusted mean serum concentrations of ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Remacha et al, 2003 (96) | Cross-sectional study in Spain. 126 HIV-positive adults receiving HAART compared with 109 HIV-positive historical control subjects from 1989 to 1992 receiving HAART. | Folate: HAART (1473 ± 1087 mmol/L), 1 of 126 (0.8%) deficient ( ![]() ![]() | Mean concentrations of red blood cell folate and serum vitamin B-12 were significantly higher in HIV-positive adults receiving HAART than in historical HIV-positive control subjects receiving HAART. Significantly fewer HIV-positive adults receiving HAART than historical control subjects had folate or vitamin B-12 deficiencies. |
Woods et al, 2003 (97) | Cross-sectional study from 1995 to 2000 in the United States. 412 HIV-positive adults (615 patient-time intervals in adults receiving HAART, 454 patient-time intervals in adults not receiving HAART). | Vitamin B-124: HAART [491 (382–667) pg/mL], 17% deficient (<350 pg/mL); no HAART [462 (369–617) pg/mL], 22% deficient | Median serum concentration of vitamin B-12 was significantly higher at the beginning of each patient-time interval in HIV-positive adults receiving HAART; multivariate analyses were not performed to account for higher intakes of vitamin B-12 (P = 0.0002) in participants receiving HAART. |
Longitudinal studies | |||
Look et al, 2001 (98) | Longitudinal study from 1997 to 1998 in Germany. 17 HIV-positive adults studied at baseline and 100 d after HAART initiation. | Vitamin B-6: baseline [11.9 (10.7–13.2) µmol/L]; follow-up [15.7 (8.8–22.7) µmol/L] Folate: baseline [3.8 (1.0–6.5) ng/mL]; follow-up [5.2 (1.8–8.5) ng/mL] Methylmalonic acid (surrogate of vitamin B-12)3: baseline [138 (100–176) µmol/L]; follow-up [186 (81–291) µmol/L] | Median follow-up serum concentrations of vitamin B-6, folate, and methylmalonic acid were not significantly higher than median baseline concentrations; however, baseline concentrations of vitamin B-6, folate, and methlymalonic acid were not significantly different from those of a cohort of HIV-negative healthy control subjects. |
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Monday, November 24, 2008
Vitamin Research in HIV- anything exciting now?
Nov 12, 2008
I have been reading your emails about supplements and HIV and you seem to be concerned that the research has slowed down. My question is: what is being studied right now, if any?
Thanks
Tony
Dear Tony
I am glad you asked this question. I have done a search on clinical trials.gov and have actually found some really interesting studies that are currently enrolling:
Micronutrient Supplemented Probiotic Yogurt for HIV/AIDS and Other Immunodeficiencies
http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT00517803?term=HIV&recr=Open&rank=441
Effects of Mixed Exercise Regime and L-Carnitine Supplementation in HIV Patients
http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT00572429?term=HIV&recr=Open&rank=54
Chromium Picolinate to treat HIV related diabetes
http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT00109746? term=HIV&recr=Open&rank=340
A Trial of Vitamins and HAART in HIV Disease Progression
http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT00383669?term=HIV&recr=Open&rank=124
The Prevalence of Vitamin D Deficiency and Effects of Vitamin D Supplementation
http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT00306410?term=HIV&recr=Open&rank=410
Acupuncture for Nausea in HIV
http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT00624793?term=HIV&recr=Open&rank=390
So, I guess I was not 100% correct when I said there is little research on nutritional and complementary therapies in HIV
I encourage everyone to call these sites and support these studies
Nelson Vergel