University of Tampere Medical School, University of Tampere, Tampere, Finland.
Int J Obes (Lond). 2013 Mar;37(3):333-40. doi: 10.1038/ijo.2012.62. Epub 2012 May 1.
The interactions between obesity and infectious diseases have recently received increasing recognition as emerging data have indicated an association between obesity and poor outcome in pandemic H1N1 influenza infection. Obesity is an established risk factor for surgical-site infections, nosocomial infections, periodontitis and skin infections. Several studies indicate that acute pancreatitis is more severe in the obese. Data are controversial and limited as regards the association between obesity and the risk and outcome of community-acquired infections such as pneumonia, bacteremia and sepsis and obesity and the course of HIV infection. As the cause-effect relationship between obesity and infection remains obscure in many infectious diseases, further studies are warranted. The consequences of obesity may have substantial effects on the global burden of infectious diseases.
肥胖与传染病之间的相互作用最近越来越受到重视,因为新出现的数据表明肥胖与大流行 H1N1 流感感染的不良预后之间存在关联。肥胖是手术部位感染、医院获得性感染、牙周炎和皮肤感染的既定危险因素。有几项研究表明,肥胖者的急性胰腺炎更严重。关于肥胖与社区获得性感染(如肺炎、菌血症和败血症)的风险和结果之间的关联以及肥胖与 HIV 感染过程之间的关联,数据存在争议且有限。由于肥胖与许多传染病之间的因果关系仍然不清楚,因此需要进一步研究。肥胖的后果可能对传染病的全球负担产生重大影响。