Factors associating with oxygenation of lower-limb muscle tissue in hemodialysis patients

AIM To evaluate the lower-limb muscle oxygenation in hemodialysis(HD) patients and identify the factors associating with muscle oxygenation.METHODS Sixty-seven HD patients(53 men and 14 women; mean age, 67.1 ± 1.2 years; mean HD duration, 5.6 ± 0.9 years) were recruited. In addition, 15 healthy indi...

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Published inWorld journal of nephrology Vol. 5; no. 6; pp. 524 - 530
Main Authors Miyazawa, Haruhisa, Ookawara, Susumu, Ito, Kiyonori, Yanai, Katsunori, Ishii, Hiroki, Kitano, Taisuke, Shindo, Mitsutoshi, Ueda, Yuichiro, Kaku, Yoshio, Hirai, Keiji, Hoshino, Taro, Tabei, Kaoru, Morishita, Yoshiyuki
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Baishideng Publishing Group Inc 06.11.2016
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Summary:AIM To evaluate the lower-limb muscle oxygenation in hemodialysis(HD) patients and identify the factors associating with muscle oxygenation.METHODS Sixty-seven HD patients(53 men and 14 women; mean age, 67.1 ± 1.2 years; mean HD duration, 5.6 ± 0.9 years) were recruited. In addition, 15 healthy individuals(nine men and six women; mean age, 38.2 ± 4.6 years) were recruited as the control group. Lower-limb muscle regional saturation of oxygen(rS O2) was monitored on the lateral side of the gastrocnemius muscle before HD using an INVOS 5100C(Covidien Japan, Tokyo, Japan), which utilizes near-infrared spectroscopy. Here, we evaluated the association between lower-limb muscle rS O2 and clinical parameters.RESULTS The r SO2 values were significantly lower in patients undergoing HD than in healthy individuals(50.0%± 1.7% vs 76.8% ± 2.5%, P < 0.001). Lower-limb muscle r SO2 showed significant positive correlations with diastolic blood pressure, blood urea nitrogen concentration, serum creatinine concentration, serum potassium concentration, serum inorganic phosphate concentration, and serum albumin concentration as well as negative correlation with HD duration. We conducted a multiple linear regression analysis using parameters that were significantly correlated with the lower-limb muscle r SO2 in a simple linear regression analysis. Multiple regression analysis demonstrated that lowerlimb muscle r SO2 was independently associated with serum inorganic phosphate(standardized coefficient: 0.27) and serum albumin concentrations(standardized coefficient: 0.24). In addition, there were no differences in lower-limb muscle r SO2 between diabetic and nondiabetic HD patients. This study has several limitations. Firstly, its sample size was relatively small. Secondly, we could not evaluate the association between lowerlimb muscle r SO2 and calculated nutritional markers, including normalized protein catabolic rate and body mass index, anthropometric measurements representing nutritional status, and the severity of protein-energy wasting. Finally, we did not routinely examine the arterial vascular status of HD patients without symptoms of peripheral artery disease. As such, it is possible that some HD patients with subclinical peripheral artery disease may have been included in this study.CONCLUSION In HD patients, the oxygenation of lower-limb muscle tissue was associated with serum inorganic phosphate and albumin concentrations, both of which represent nutritional status.
Bibliography:Haruhisa Miyazawa;Susumu Ookawara;Kiyonori Ito;Katsunori Yanai;Hiroki Ishii;Taisuke Kitano;Mitsutoshi Shindo;Yuichiro Ueda;Yoshio Kaku;Keiji Hirai;Taro Hoshino;Kaoru Tabei;Yoshiyuki Morishita;Division of Nephrology, First Department of Integrated Medicine, Saitama Medical Center, Jichi Medical University;Department of Internal Medicine, Minami-uonuma City Hospital
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Correspondence to: Susumu Ookawara, MD, PhD, Division of Nephrology, First Department of Integrated Medicine, Saitama Medical Center, Jichi Medical University, 1-847 Amanuma-cho, Omiya-ku, Saitama-City, Saitama 330-8503, Japan. ookawaras@.jichi.ac.jp
Telephone: +81-48-6472111 Fax: +81-48-6476831
Author contributions: Miyazawa H and Ookawara S contributed to data acquisition, data analysis and interpretation, and writing of article; Miyazawa H, Ookawara S and Ito K contributed to study conception and design; Yanai K, Ishii H, Kitano T, Shindo M, Ueda Y, Kaku Y, Hirai K, Hoshino T, Tabei K and Morishita Y contributed to editing, reviewing and final approval of article.
ISSN:2220-6124
2220-6124
DOI:10.5527/wjn.v5.i6.524