{"title":"Latinxs with HIV: Depressive Cognitive Alterations as a Precursor to Cardio-Motor Deficits","authors":"Aneesah Hyder, Martin G. Rosario","doi":"10.34256/IJPEFS2122","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"HIV is a debilitating infection that often presents with health-related complications, further reducing quality of life. Of the most common comorbidities accompanying HIV is depression, which can induce cognitive alterations alongside those resulting from the virus. Latinxs are disproportionately susceptible to both afflictions and face innumerable challenges in the identification and diagnosis of depression. Consequently, HIV-infected Latinxs may experience additional cognitive symptomatology from the simultaneous prevalence of depression and HIV, potentially affecting their gait and cardiovascular profiles. This study aimed to determine the impact of depression on cardio-motor components in HIV-infected Latinxs. Records of 291 stable HIV+ participants were collected from La Perla de Gran Precio Community Center, analyzed for depression, and respectively allocated to the depression group (70) and the group without depression (221). Cardio-motor values were obtained by conducting the Ross treadmill test, a submaximal cardiovascular assessment. An ANOVA revealed similarities in cardiomotor profiles between groups, alluding to the absence of depression-induced modifications to gait and cardiovascular health. Community exercise and cardiopulmonary intervention programs are beneficial to the quality of life in this population during all stages of HIV. However, HIV-infected Latinxs with depression face acute cultural challenges, causing diagnoses and treatment oversights and deficiencies for those who are suffering. Public health efforts should aim to remove barriers facing this population to ultimately reduce the inflated prevalence of both afflictions. Future research should focus on the crucial differentiation of Latinx depressive symptoms from those identical in HIV prior to reinvestigating cardiomotor alterations.","PeriodicalId":110668,"journal":{"name":"International Journal of Physical Education, Fitness and Sports","volume":"14 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-04-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"International Journal of Physical Education, Fitness and Sports","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.34256/IJPEFS2122","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
HIV is a debilitating infection that often presents with health-related complications, further reducing quality of life. Of the most common comorbidities accompanying HIV is depression, which can induce cognitive alterations alongside those resulting from the virus. Latinxs are disproportionately susceptible to both afflictions and face innumerable challenges in the identification and diagnosis of depression. Consequently, HIV-infected Latinxs may experience additional cognitive symptomatology from the simultaneous prevalence of depression and HIV, potentially affecting their gait and cardiovascular profiles. This study aimed to determine the impact of depression on cardio-motor components in HIV-infected Latinxs. Records of 291 stable HIV+ participants were collected from La Perla de Gran Precio Community Center, analyzed for depression, and respectively allocated to the depression group (70) and the group without depression (221). Cardio-motor values were obtained by conducting the Ross treadmill test, a submaximal cardiovascular assessment. An ANOVA revealed similarities in cardiomotor profiles between groups, alluding to the absence of depression-induced modifications to gait and cardiovascular health. Community exercise and cardiopulmonary intervention programs are beneficial to the quality of life in this population during all stages of HIV. However, HIV-infected Latinxs with depression face acute cultural challenges, causing diagnoses and treatment oversights and deficiencies for those who are suffering. Public health efforts should aim to remove barriers facing this population to ultimately reduce the inflated prevalence of both afflictions. Future research should focus on the crucial differentiation of Latinx depressive symptoms from those identical in HIV prior to reinvestigating cardiomotor alterations.
艾滋病毒是一种使人衰弱的感染,经常出现与健康有关的并发症,进一步降低生活质量。伴随艾滋病毒的最常见的合并症是抑郁症,它可以诱发与病毒引起的认知改变。拉丁美洲人尤其容易受到这两种疾病的影响,在抑郁症的识别和诊断方面面临着无数的挑战。因此,艾滋病毒感染的拉丁人可能会因抑郁症和艾滋病毒的同时流行而经历额外的认知症状,可能影响他们的步态和心血管特征。本研究旨在确定抑郁症对艾滋病毒感染的拉丁人的心脏运动成分的影响。从La Perla de Gran Precio社区中心收集291名稳定的HIV阳性参与者的记录,分析抑郁症,并分别分配到抑郁症组(70)和非抑郁症组(221)。通过进行罗斯跑步机试验(一种亚最大值心血管评估)获得心肌运动值。方差分析揭示了组间心脏运动特征的相似性,暗示没有抑郁症引起的步态和心血管健康改变。社区运动和心肺干预计划对艾滋病毒感染各阶段人群的生活质量都有好处。然而,感染艾滋病毒的拉丁裔抑郁症患者面临着严峻的文化挑战,导致患者在诊断和治疗方面存在疏忽和缺陷。公共卫生工作的目标应该是消除这一人群面临的障碍,最终减少这两种疾病的过度流行。在重新研究心脏运动改变之前,未来的研究应侧重于拉丁裔抑郁症状与HIV相同症状的关键区别。