Health of HIV Infected People: Food, Nutrition and Lifestyle Without Antiretroviral Drugs defines the supportive roles of bioactive foods, exercise, and dietary supplements on the health of HIV infected people who do not have access to resources or those who choose not to utilize antiretroviral drugs. Approaches such as the application of traditional herbs and foods are given careful definition by experts who define the risks and benefits of such practices within this important context. Readers learn how to treat or ameliorate the effects of chronic retroviral disease using readily…mehr
Health of HIV Infected People: Food, Nutrition and Lifestyle Without Antiretroviral Drugs defines the supportive roles of bioactive foods, exercise, and dietary supplements on the health of HIV infected people who do not have access to resources or those who choose not to utilize antiretroviral drugs.
Approaches such as the application of traditional herbs and foods are given careful definition by experts who define the risks and benefits of such practices within this important context.
Readers learn how to treat or ameliorate the effects of chronic retroviral disease using readily available, cheap foods, and dietary supplements. Ultimately, this work delivers a current, concise, scientific appraisal of the efficacy of key foods, nutrients, dietary plants, and behavioral changes in preventing and improving the quality of life of HIV infected infants and adults who are not undergoing antiretroviral therapy.
Section I: Overview and Food 1. Dietary supplements among people with HIV and vulnerability to medical internet misinformation; Seth Kalichman 2. Eating coffee candy: HIV risk at Huli funerals; Philip Gibbs and Heather Worth 3. Infant feeding policies and HIV; Louise Kuhn 4. Alcohol use and food insecurity in HIV disease management; Seth Kalichman 5. Carotid intima-media thickness and plaque in HIV-infected patients on the Mediterranean diet; Klaudija Viskovic Section II: Nutrients and Lifestyle 6. Nutritional treatment approach for ART naïve HIV-infected children; Marianne Oliveira Falco Sr. and Erika Aparecida Silveira 7. Nutrition therapy for HAART naïve HIV-infected patients; Marianne Oliveira Falco Sr. 8. The role of nutrition training for health workers in addressing poor feeding practices and undernutrition among HIV-positive children; Junko Yasuoka, Bruno Sunguya, David Urassa and Masamine Jimba 9. Nutrition and Food in AIDS patients; Teresa Kokot 10. Zinc Supplementation for Infants and Children with HIV Infection; Zhang Lingli 11. HIV AIDS in India: A Nutritional Panorama; Deepika Anand and Seema Puri 12.Undernutrition, food insecurity, and antiretroviral outcomes: an overview of evidence from Sub-Saharan Africa Patou Masika Musumari 13. How the HIV epidemic carved an indelible imprint on Infant Feeding; Hoosen Coovadia and Heena Brahmbhatt 14. Nutrition care of the HIV-exposed child; Anju Seth 15. HIV+ Patients Responded to Dietary Supplementation With Cysteine or Glutamine; Roberto Carlos Burini 16. The role of micronutrients in the diet of HIV-1-infected individuals during retroviral therapy on other infections; Giuseppe Nunnari Section III: Exercise and behavioral lifestyle changes in the Prevention and Treatment of HIV/AIDS nutritional changes 17. Exercise and management of body weight in older people living with HIV; Joachim Voss 18. Exercise treadmill test for the assessment of cardiac risk markers in HIV; De Lorenzo Andrea 19. MEASURES OF PHYSICAL FUNCTION IN THE MANAGEMENT OF INDIVIDUALS LIVING WITH HIV/AIDS; Vagner Raso Section IV: Models of HIV: Lessons to be learned from animal viruses 20. Animal Lentiviruses: Models for Human Immunodeficiency Viruses and Nutrition; Mitchel G. Stover and Ronald R. Watson 21. T cell number, nutritional status and HIV: The Cuban experience in the provision of food and nutrition care to people with HIV/AIDS; EM Linares Guerra
Section I: Overview and Food 1. Dietary supplements among people with HIV and vulnerability to medical internet misinformation; Seth Kalichman 2. Eating coffee candy: HIV risk at Huli funerals; Philip Gibbs and Heather Worth 3. Infant feeding policies and HIV; Louise Kuhn 4. Alcohol use and food insecurity in HIV disease management; Seth Kalichman 5. Carotid intima-media thickness and plaque in HIV-infected patients on the Mediterranean diet; Klaudija Viskovic Section II: Nutrients and Lifestyle 6. Nutritional treatment approach for ART naïve HIV-infected children; Marianne Oliveira Falco Sr. and Erika Aparecida Silveira 7. Nutrition therapy for HAART naïve HIV-infected patients; Marianne Oliveira Falco Sr. 8. The role of nutrition training for health workers in addressing poor feeding practices and undernutrition among HIV-positive children; Junko Yasuoka, Bruno Sunguya, David Urassa and Masamine Jimba 9. Nutrition and Food in AIDS patients; Teresa Kokot 10. Zinc Supplementation for Infants and Children with HIV Infection; Zhang Lingli 11. HIV AIDS in India: A Nutritional Panorama; Deepika Anand and Seema Puri 12.Undernutrition, food insecurity, and antiretroviral outcomes: an overview of evidence from Sub-Saharan Africa Patou Masika Musumari 13. How the HIV epidemic carved an indelible imprint on Infant Feeding; Hoosen Coovadia and Heena Brahmbhatt 14. Nutrition care of the HIV-exposed child; Anju Seth 15. HIV+ Patients Responded to Dietary Supplementation With Cysteine or Glutamine; Roberto Carlos Burini 16. The role of micronutrients in the diet of HIV-1-infected individuals during retroviral therapy on other infections; Giuseppe Nunnari Section III: Exercise and behavioral lifestyle changes in the Prevention and Treatment of HIV/AIDS nutritional changes 17. Exercise and management of body weight in older people living with HIV; Joachim Voss 18. Exercise treadmill test for the assessment of cardiac risk markers in HIV; De Lorenzo Andrea 19. MEASURES OF PHYSICAL FUNCTION IN THE MANAGEMENT OF INDIVIDUALS LIVING WITH HIV/AIDS; Vagner Raso Section IV: Models of HIV: Lessons to be learned from animal viruses 20. Animal Lentiviruses: Models for Human Immunodeficiency Viruses and Nutrition; Mitchel G. Stover and Ronald R. Watson 21. T cell number, nutritional status and HIV: The Cuban experience in the provision of food and nutrition care to people with HIV/AIDS; EM Linares Guerra
Es gelten unsere Allgemeinen Geschäftsbedingungen: www.buecher.de/agb
Impressum
www.buecher.de ist ein Shop der buecher.de GmbH & Co. KG Bürgermeister-Wegele-Str. 12, 86167 Augsburg Amtsgericht Augsburg HRA 13309