脊髓损伤患者的碳水化合物和脂质紊乱及相关考虑。

Timothy J Wilt, Kathleen F Carlson, Gary D Goldish, Roderick MacDonald, Catherine Niewoehner, Indulis Rutks, Tatyana Shamliyan, James Tacklind, Brent C Taylor, Robert L Kane
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:评估慢性脊髓损伤成人中碳水化合物和脂质紊乱的患病率,评估其对心血管疾病的风险贡献,以及运动、药物和饮食治疗对改变这些紊乱和降低心血管疾病风险的潜在影响。数据来源:截至2007年8月,MEDLINE (PubMed)、Cochrane数据库、美国脊髓损伤协会、美国截瘫协会、美国瘫痪退伍军人协会、脊髓医学联合会和WorldCat的网站。回顾方法:针对碳水化合物和脂质紊乱患病率的英语观察性研究,如果它们评估了至少100名慢性脊髓损伤的成年人,或者如果使用对照组,则总共评估了100名受试者。本文对1990年以后发表的50余例成人脊髓损伤的流行病学调查资料进行了总结,并对心血管疾病的发病率和死亡率进行了分析。1996-2007年的干预研究不论设计或大小,只要评估了运动、饮食或药物治疗,并报告了碳水化合物、脂质或心血管结果,就纳入研究。结果:关于慢性脊髓损伤成人中碳水化合物和脂质紊乱的患病率、影响和结局的证据质量较弱。由于研究相对较少,样本量小,缺乏适当的对照组,未能调整已知的混杂变量,以及报告结果的变化,证据受到限制。然而,现有的证据并不表明脊髓损伤的成年人发生碳水化合物和脂质紊乱或随后的心血管疾病和死亡的风险明显高于健全的成年人。在脊髓损伤的成年人中,体重指数对于评估身体成分,尤其是体脂百分比是不可靠的。目前还没有高质量的研究评估运动、饮食或药物治疗对这些疾病的影响。结论:现有证据不支持将脊髓损伤状态作为一个独立变量来评估心血管发病率和死亡率的风险,或与健全成人相比改变诊断/治疗阈值。此外,与健全个体相比,脊髓损伤个体可能具有独特的生理差异。因此,在健全成人中进行的评估干预措施改善碳水化合物、脂质紊乱和随后的CVD的疗效和危害的研究结果能否外推到脊髓损伤患者身上还不确定。运动在脊髓损伤患者中的作用是一个独特的挑战,需要进一步探索广泛的脊髓损伤运动项目的益处、危害和资源含义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Carbohydrate and lipid disorders and relevant considerations in persons with spinal cord injury.

Objectives: To assess the prevalence of carbohydrate and lipid disorders in adults with chronic spinal cord injury and evaluate their risk contribution to cardiovascular diseases and the potential impact of exercise and pharmacologic and dietary therapies to alter these disorders and reduce cardiovascular disease risk.

Data sources: MEDLINE (PubMed), Cochrane Database and Web sites of the American Spinal Injury Association, American Paraplegia Society, Paralyzed Veterans of America, Consortium of Spinal Cord Medicine, and WorldCat through August 2007.

Review methods: English language observational studies addressing prevalence of carbohydrate and lipid disorders were included if they evaluated at least 100 adults with chronic spinal cord injury or a total of 100 subjects if using a control group. Epidemiologic investigations of more than 50 adults with spinal cord injury that were published in English after 1990 and reported cardiovascular morbidity and mortality were abstracted. Intervention studies from 1996-2007 were included regardless of design or size if they assessed exercise, diet, or pharmacologic therapies and reported carbohydrate, lipid, or cardiovascular outcomes.

Results: The quality of evidence regarding the prevalence, impact, and outcomes of carbohydrate and lipid disorders in adults with chronic spinal cord injuries is weak. Evidence is limited by relatively few studies, small sample size, lack of appropriate control groups, failure to adjust for known confounding variables, and variation in reported outcomes. However, the existing evidence does not indicate that adults with spinal cord injuries are at markedly greater risk for carbohydrate and lipid disorders or subsequent cardiovascular morbidity and mortality than able-bodied adults. Body mass index is not reliable for assessing body composition, especially percent body fat, in adults with spinal cord injury. There are no high quality studies evaluating the impact of exercise, diet, or pharmacologic therapies on these disorders.

Conclusions: The available evidence does not support incorporating SCI status as an independent variable to assess risk of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality or to alter diagnostic/treatment thresholds compared to able-bodied adults. Furthermore, individuals with SCI may have unique physiologic differences compared to able-bodied individuals. As a result, it is uncertain that findings from studies conducted in able-bodied adults evaluating efficacy and harms of interventions to improve carbohydrate, lipid disorders, and subsequent CVD can be extrapolated to individuals with SCI. The role of exercise in individuals with spinal cord injuries represents a unique challenge and requires further exploration into the benefits, harms, and resource implications of broad-based spinal cord injury exercise programs.

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