Topic Overview
Exercise can't control the
HIV infection. But exercise may help you feel better
by reducing stress. Exercise may also help your
immune system work better.
Exercise:
- Is safe.
- Improves strength and
endurance.
- Improves heart and lung fitness.
- May help
you feel less tired or fatigued.
- Enhances your sense of
well-being.
- May help stabilize or prevent declines in CD4+ cell
counts.
Start exercising while you are healthy, and do your best to find new
ways to keep yourself motivated to maintain your exercise program.
The ability of a person who has HIV to improve his or her fitness
through training is similar to that of a person who does not have HIV. But
people with HIV may find it harder to continue with a training program because
of fatigue or muscle wasting.
Participation in competitive sports does not pose a risk of spreading
HIV to other athletes or coaches. In sports in which exposure to blood can
occur, the risk of spreading HIV is very small. But if a person
(HIV-infected or not) does start to bleed, he or she should be taken out of the
game and the wounds should be covered before the person returns to the
game.
Credits
ByHealthwise Staff
Primary Medical ReviewerE. Gregory Thompson, MD - Internal Medicine
Adam Husney, MD - Family Medicine
Specialist Medical ReviewerPeter Shalit, MD, PhD - Internal Medicine
Current as ofMarch 3, 2017