Title of article :
Oral supplements as adjunctive treatment to nutritionalcounseling in malnourished HIV infected patients: randomized controlled trial
Author/Authors :
A. Schwenk، نويسنده , , H. Steuck، نويسنده , , Gregory G. Kremer، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
Abstract :
Aims:
To compare nutritional counseling with and without oral supplements in HIV-infectedpatients with recent weight loss.
Design:
Randomized non-blinded controlled trial, stratified for change in antiretroviral treatment atbaseline.
Patients:
HIV-infected patients with recent weight loss (> 5% of total, and >3% in the last month).
Intervention:
Nutritional counseling to increase dietary intake by 600 kcal/day over 8 weeks; in group A (n=24) by normal food, and in group B (n=26) by a range of fortified drink supplements with a calorific value of 0.6 to 1.5 kcal/ml.
Methods:
Body composition by bioelectrical impedance analysis, dietary intake by 24 h recall.
Results:
Fat free mass increased from baseline to week 8 (P< 0.05) with no difference between groups Aand B (P = 0.97). Body cell mass and weight gain were not significant and equal between groups. Assessed at weeks 2 and 4, group B patients consumed 11 ± 6 kcal/kg as supplements, and their total energy intake was 6 kcal/kg higher than in group A (P< 0.01). Total energy intake was not different between groups at weeks 6 and 8.
Discussion:
Nutritional counseling and oral supplements are both feasible methods to restore foodenergy intake in malnourished HIV-infected patients. Although normal food intake is partially replaced, oral supplements may improve the adherence to a weight gain regimen.
Keywords :
Counseling , Dietary supplements , HIV wasting syndrome , nutritionalsupport , Randomized controlled trial , acquired immunodeficiency syndrome
Journal title :
Clinical Nutrition
Journal title :
Clinical Nutrition