Good nutrition is critical for
people living with HIV and AIDS. Basically, nutrition should be viewed as an
essential co-therapy that can help maximize your medical management of HIV.
Eating well can help:
-
Prevent or delay the loss of
muscle tissue or "wasting"
-
Strengthen the immune system
-
Reduce viral mutations
-
Decrease the incidence and
severity of opportunistic infections and hospitalizations
-
Lessen the debilitating symptoms
of HIV/AIDS
If you're HIV infected, it's
important to avoid any unplanned weight loss, which can further weaken the
immune system's ability to fight off infection. Eating enough food--and the
right foods--to maintain your proper weight, and keeping your body strong can
make a real difference in staying healthy. Generally speaking, people with
HIV/AIDS should try to eat a diet that is 30% protein, 30% fat, and 40%
carbohydrates. And eat 3-5 vegetable servings and 2-4 fruit servings every day.
(refer to Pyramid)
Protein is
involved in nearly every biological process of the human
body. It builds muscle tissue and helps your immune system
fight off infections. We need protein to keep organs like
our heart and lungs working well and to keep ourselves
strong and active. Studies have shown that HIV weight loss
tends to reduce protein stores more quickly than simple
starvation, and a major nutritional goal for HIV-infected
individuals should be to build or maintain your muscle mass.
Carbohydrates and fat are
important because HIV can increase the body's metabolic rate--causing us to use
more calories to do the same work we did with less calories before becoming HIV
positive.
Finally, if
you're not eating enough to maintain your weight, you're
probably not getting adequate amounts of the vitamins,
minerals, and phytochemicals that our bodies need to produce
energy, to help with many chemical reactions that we carry
out automatically, and to help protect us from chronic
diseases such as heart disease, cancer and high blood
pressure. Depending on the medication you are taking, you
may not be
eating enough to absorb those
medications properly and get them into your bloodstream
where they can work effectively. Not getting enough of these
essential nutrients can further weaken your immune system.
Even though it is a good idea to take a multivitamin every
day, you must remember that supplements cannot take the
place of real food. That's why they're called supplements.