JoVE Logo
教师资源中心

登录

Exergaming in Older People Living with HIV Improves Balance, Mobility and Ameliorates Some Aspects of Frailty

DOI :

10.3791/54275-v

7:27 min

October 6th, 2016

October 6th, 2016

9,679 Views

1Department of Surgery, Interdisciplinary Consortium on Advanced Motion Performance (iCAMP), College of Medicine, University of Arizona, 2Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Disease, College of Medicine, University of Arizona, 3Interdisciplinary Consortium on Advanced Motion Performance (iCAMP), Division of Vascular Surgery and Endovascular Therapy, Michael E. DeBakey Department of Surgery, Baylor College of Medicine

Persons infected with HIV are often frail, depressed and live a sedentary lifestyle for which conventional exercise is too taxing. Here, we present an exercise protocol that ameliorates aspects of frailty in HIV-infected persons. An exergame integrating cognitive control was developed using biosensors that measured balance, weight-shifting and obstacle crossing.

Tags

Exergaming

-- Views

Related Videos

article

Microsurgical Venous Pouch Arterial-Bifurcation Aneurysms in the Rabbit Model: Technical Aspects

article

Sequencing of Bacterial Microflora in Peripheral Blood: our Experience with HIV-infected Patients

article

Technical Aspects of the Mouse Aortocaval Fistula

article

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

article

Collecting Saliva and Measuring Salivary Cortisol and Alpha-amylase in Frail Community Residing Older Adults via Family Caregivers

article

Non-invasive Imaging and Analysis of Cerebral Ischemia in Living Rats Using Positron Emission Tomography with 18F-FDG

article

Clinical Assessment of Spatiotemporal Gait Parameters in Patients and Older Adults

article

A Murine Model of Arterial Restenosis: Technical Aspects of Femoral Wire Injury

article

Increasing Pulmonary Artery Pulsatile Flow Improves Hypoxic Pulmonary Hypertension in Piglets

article

Adapted Resistance Training Improves Strength in Eight Weeks in Individuals with Multiple Sclerosis

JoVE Logo

政策

使用条款

隐私

科研

教育

关于 JoVE

版权所属 © 2024 MyJoVE 公司版权所有,本公司不涉及任何医疗业务和医疗服务。