August 17, 2016
________________________________________________________________________________
"It's not one particular syndrome," explains Dr. Grinspoon, regarding the pernicious body changes that can still affect long-term survivors of HIV and others. "There's different degrees of gaining abdominal fat and loss of subcutaneous fat. They don't always occur simultaneously, but in general the gain of abdominal fat is visceral (inside organ cavity) in nature so people gain abdominal visceral fat and lose subcutaneous fat both in the abdomen and extremities. We really refer to patients primarily as having lipohypertrophic or more of the abdominal type, or lipoatrophic more the fat loss type, or a combined type."
Watch TheBody.com's HIV and Aging Expert Nelson Vergel interview Dr. Grinspoon about the causes of body shape changes in HIV -- and most importantly, what you can do about them:
You can also download a transcript of the entire interview.
JD Davids is the managing editor for TheBody.com and TheBodyPRO.com.
Follow JD on Twitter: @JDAtTheBody.
Copyright © 2016 Remedy Health Media, LLC. All rights reserved.
Related Stories
- An HIVer's Guide to Metabolic Complications
- TheBody.com's Lipoatrophy Resource Center
- More on Lipodystrophy & Metabolic Complications
Read more articles from The Body.com, here.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.