Comparing Nutrition Status of In-Centre Nocturnal Hemodialysis Patients to Conventional Hemodialysis Patients: a Prospective Cohort Study

Date
2017
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
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Abstract
Background: Malnutrition is prevalent in patients receiving hemodialysis (HD). Compared to conventional HD (CHD), in-centre nocturnal hemodialysis (ICND) has shown improvements in patients’ dietary intake, body composition and mortality risk. Methods: We assessed the feasibility of some nutrition assessment tools (MIS, dietary intake, and anthropometric, functional and biochemical measurements) among 10 CHD and 9 ICND patients for a future study to investigate whether ICND is associated with an improvement in nutrition status compared to CHD. Results: Lean tissue mass was higher at baseline (p=0.007), handgrip strength was higher at 6 months (p=0.04) among ICND patients. Dietary intakes were non-significantly higher at both time points and phosphate binder dosage non-significantly declined in the ICND group. The ICND group had a high attrition rate (44%) over 6 months. Conclusion: These potentially clinically important findings merit further investigation with a more comprehensive study to determine whether ICND offers a nutritional advantage over CHD.
Description
Keywords
Epidemiology, Nutrition
Citation
Holmes, R. (2017). Comparing Nutrition Status of In-Centre Nocturnal Hemodialysis Patients to Conventional Hemodialysis Patients: a Prospective Cohort Study (Master's thesis, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada). Retrieved from https://prism.ucalgary.ca. doi:10.11575/PRISM/25370