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Changing HIV treatment due to lipodystrophy |
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HIV AIDS -
HIV and Aids Medication Guide
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Written by Administrator
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Monday, 15 May 2006 |
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Lipodystrophy is the name given to a syndrome of side-effects caused by anti-HIV drugs. It includes an increase in fats in the blood (which can increase your long-term risk of a heart attack, diabetes and stroke), and changes in body shape (including fat loss from the face, limbs and buttocks), and fat gain (at the back of the neck – sometimes called buffalo hump – and around the stomach).
The NRTI d4T has been
particularly associated with fat loss, and if you are taking d4T you are
recommended to switch it for another drug, if you have treatment options
available.
If you have high blood fats and are taking a protease inhibitor, then it might
be worth switching to an NNRTI, if this option is available to you. Changes in
your diet can also help, see the chapter
Nutrition and HIV . Exercise can also be helpful and is looked at in more
detail in the chapter
Exercise . Your doctor can also prescribe drugs (called statins and
fibrates) to control fats in your blood.
Changing your treatment appears to have only a very minimal impact on body fat
changes. Lost fat has been shown to slowly return to the limbs for two years
after switching from d4T to abacavir. Fat loss can be very distressing,
particularly fat loss from the face. The use of a cosmetic treatment called
New Fill (polylactic acid) can help fill out the checks and remedy the
wasted appearance that facial fat loss causes. Treatment involves a course of
injections, and it may have to be repeated. Some, but not all, HIV clinics
provide the treatment for free on the NHS, but some people have to obtain New
Fill treatment privately. A single course of treatment costs from £800 –
£1,200.
Surgery is sometimes used to remove fat which has accumulated around the back of
the neck.
Fat loss and fat gain caused by anti-HIV drugs can be very emotionally
distressing and uncomfortable. It’s important that you let your doctor know how
body fat changes are affecting you. If you have fat loss from the face or fat
gain around the neck, your doctor may be able to refer you for cosmetic surgery
to help correct it. Staff at hospitals with large HIV clinics are becoming very
skilled at providing cosmetic treatments for fat loss and fat gain caused by
anti-HIV drugs. Also make sure that you tell your doctor if changes in your body
shape are causing emotional or psychological problems, as mental health support
will be available.
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