4.4 Article

Measuring Frailty in HIV-infected Individuals. Identification of Frail Patients is the First Step to Amelioration and Reversal of Frailty

Journal

JOVE-JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS
Volume -, Issue 77, Pages -

Publisher

JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS
DOI: 10.3791/50537

Keywords

Medicine; Issue 77; Infection; Virology; Infectious Diseases; Anatomy; Physiology; Molecular Biology; Biomedical Engineering; Retroviridae Infections; Body Weight Changes; Diagnostic Techniques and Procedures; Physical Examination; Muscle Strength; Behavior; Virus Diseases; Pathological Conditions; Signs and Symptoms; Diagnosis; Musculoskeletal and Neural Physiological Phenomena; HIV; HIV-1; AIDS; Frailty; Depression; Weight Loss; Weakness; Slowness; Exhaustion; Aging; clinical techniques

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A simple, validated protocol consisting of a battery of tests is available to identify elderly patients with frailty syndrome. This syndrome of decreased reserve and resistance to stressors increases in incidence with increasing age. In the elderly, frailty may pursue a step-wise loss of function from non-frail to pre-frail to frail. We studied frailty in HIV-infected patients and found that similar to 20% are frail using the Fried phenotype using stringent criteria developed for the elderly(1,2). In HIV infection the syndrome occurs at a younger age. HIV patients were checked for 1) unintentional weight loss; 2) slowness as determined by walking speed; 3) weakness as measured by a grip dynamometer; 4) exhaustion by responses to a depression scale; and 5) low physical activity was determined by assessing kilocalories expended in a week's time. Pre-frailty was present with any two of five criteria and frailty was present if any three of the five criteria were abnormal. The tests take approximately 10-15 min to complete and they can be performed by medical assistants during routine clinic visits. Test results are scored by referring to standard tables. Understanding which of the five components contribute to frailty in an individual patient can allow the clinician to address relevant underlying problems, many of which are not evident in routine HIV clinic visits.

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