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Query: UNIPROT:P50502 (
Hip
)
7,003
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Arthropathy of the hip is moderate in frequency in haemophiliac patients, but is less common than ankle, knee or elbow arthropathy. We report about our experience with total hip replacement in patients with severe bleeding disorders over a period of 30 years. Between July 1972 and 2002, 15 hips in 13 patients were replaced. The main bleeding disorders were Haemophilia A in ten patients and severe v. Willebrand disease in three patients. The mean follow-up was 132 months (range 12-363). We can demonstrate good long-term results, with only one aseptic loosening after 14 years and one septic loosening after 14 months in an
HIV
-positive patient. The Harris
Hip
Score increased from 48 points (32-66) preoperatively to 89 (76-100) postoperatively. In conclusion, total hip replacement performed in a specialised haemophiliac centre is a safe procedure, and results in pain relief and improvement of the quality of life in patients with severe bleeding disorders.
...
PMID:Total hip replacement in patients with severe bleeding disorders. A 30 years single center experience. 1671 21
As HAART becomes more accessible in sub-Saharan Africa, metabolic syndromes, body fat redistribution (BFR), and cardiovascular disease may become more prevalent. We conducted a 6-month, randomized controlled trial to test whether cardiorespiratory exercise training (CET), improves metabolic, body composition and cardiorespiratory fitness parameters in HAART-treated
HIV
(+) African subjects with BFR. Six months of CET reduced waist circumference (-7.13 +/- 4.4 cm, p < 0.0001), WHR (-0.10 +/- 0.1, p < 0.0001), sum skinfold thickness (-6.15 +/- 8.2 mm, p < 0.0001) and % body fat mass (-1.5 +/- 3.3, p < 0.0001) in
HIV
(+)BFR(+)EXS.
Hip
circumference was unchanged in non-exercise control groups. CET reduced fasting total cholesterol (-0.03 +/- 1.11 mM, p < 0.05), triglycerides (-0.22 +/-0.48 mM, p < 0.05) and glucose levels (-0.21 +/- 0.71 mM, p < 0.05) (p < 0.0001). HDL-, LDL-cholesterol and HOMA values were unchanged after CET. Interestingly,
HIV
(+) subjects randomized to non-exercising groups experienced increases in fasting plasma glucose levels, whereas
HIV
seronegative controls did not (p < 0.001). Predicted VO(2) peak increased more in the
HIV
(+)BFR(+)EXS than in all other groups (4.7 +/- 3.9 ml/kg/min, p < 0.0001). Exercise training positively modulated body composition and metabolic profiles, and improved cardiorespiratory fitness in HAART-treated
HIV
(+) Africans. These beneficial adaptations imply that exercise training is a safe, inexpensive, practical, and effective treatment for evolving metabolic and cardiovascular syndromes associated with
HIV
and HAART exposure in resource-limited sub-Saharan countries, where treatment is improving, morbidity and mortality rates are declining, but where minimal resources are available to manage HIVand HAART-associated cardiovascular and metabolic syndromes.
...
PMID:Exercise training reduces central adiposity and improves metabolic indices in HAART-treated HIV-positive subjects in Rwanda: a randomized controlled trial. 1827 43
Substance use and
HIV
risk behaviors are increasing among African-American youth. Interventions that incorporate youth values and beliefs are needed to reduce this trajectory.
Hip
-hop plays an important role in the lives of many African-American youth and provides a context within which to prevent risky behaviors. The current study examines the efficacy of a hip-hop based substance use and
HIV
preventive intervention that targets African-American middle-school youth. The sample consists of 68 middle-school students who completed baseline and 6-month follow-up assessments. Findings suggest that students in the intervention group were significantly more likely to have higher knowledge of perception of drug risk and more knowledge about
HIV
/AIDS compared to students in the comparison group at the 6-month post-intervention assessment. Discussion is centered on implications of hip-hop as a viable approach for preventing substance use and
HIV
within a high-risk group.
...
PMID:Hip-hop to prevent substance use and HIV among African-American youth: a preliminary investigation. 1943 67
Using popular culture to engage students in discussions of
HIV
prevention is a nontraditional approach that may complement current prevention efforts and enhance the ability to reach youth who are at high risk of contracting
HIV
and other sexually transmitted infections.
Hip
-hop or rap music is the dominant genre of music among adolescents, especially Black and Latino youth who are disproportionately impacted by
HIV
and AIDS. This paper describes the rationale and development of the Reducing
HIV
and AIDS through Prevention (RHAP) program, a school-based program that uses hip-hop/rap music as a vehicle for raising awareness among adolescents about
HIV
/AIDS. Constructs from the Social Cognitive Theory and the Sexual Script Theory were used in developing the program. It was piloted and evaluated among 26 middle school students in East Harlem, New York. The lessons learned from a formative evaluation of the program and the implications for developing other programs targeting public health problems are discussed. The RHAP program challenges the traditional pedagogue-student paradigm and provides an alternative approach to teaching about
HIV
prevention and awareness.
...
PMID:Reducing HIV and AIDS through Prevention (RHAP): a theoretically based approach for teaching HIV prevention to adolescents through an exploration of popular music. 2019 78
This descriptive case study aimed at assessing body's composition and impact on biochemical markers of people living with
HIV
/AIDS (S1=male-1, S2=female-1) undergoing a four-month intervention program of resistance exercises. Was analyzed the lipid profile (total cholesterol, LDL, HDL and triglycerides serum), immunological parameters (CD4 and viral load/VL) and morphological parameters (body mass index BMI, waist/
Hip
/WHR, perimeters and skinfold). Blood samples and antropometric measures were obtained in the pre-exercise (pre-test) and immediately after (16 weeks) of exercise (post-test). An increase in HDL (38 pre, 42 post), LDL (89.6 pre, 95 post) was noted for S1 and a decrease in HDL (33 pre, 25 post) and LDL (121.6 pre, 121 post) for S2; a decrease in Triglyceride for S1 (292 pre, 214 post) and increase for S2 (102 pre, 166 post). Total cholesterol increased for both subjects (186 pre, 261 post S1 and 175 pre, 179 post S2). there was a decrease in CD4 for S1 (598 pre, 577 post) and an increase for S2 (748 pre, 1.071 post). With respect to viral load, we found that both subjects (S1 and S2) presented values below the minimum limit (pre and post test), with no significant changes. Body composition improved (LMpre S1=43.13% and S2=23.35% and LMpost S1=46.51 and S2=26.15%; BFpre S1=41.13 and S2=18.14% and BFpost S1=38.32 and S2=14.77%), as did BMI (25.27 pre, 27.44 post S1) and (24.24 pre, 24.74 post S2). The resistance exercise program as base in this intervention model promoted a healthy state for
HIV
and AIDS patients and did not pose any health risks to them.
...
PMID:Morphology and biochemical markers of people living with HIV/AIDS undergoing a resistance exercise program: clinical series. 2190 85
Hip
arthroplasty is widely used in the treatment of osteoarthritis, especially in patients with steroid-induced osteonecrosis of the femoral head. However, this procedure in
HIV
-seropositive patients has not been described in the Polish literature and is not considered a standard treatment. This paper presents a case study of an
HIV
-seropositive patient who underwent hip arthroplasty for steroid-induced avascular necrosis of the femoral head without significant complications. Based on this case, we propose an approach to the management of this group of patients.
...
PMID:Total hip arthroplasty in HIV-seropositive patients--case study and review of literature. 2504 87