The amount of skeletal muscle mass is associated with arterial stiffness in hemodialysis patients

Introduction Sarcopenia was determined to be associated with increased arterial stiffness in the nondialysis patient population, but there is no available data on this subject in dialysis patients. Methods A total of 79 patients were included in the study. Sarcopenia was diagnosed according to the E...

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Veröffentlicht in:Therapeutic apheresis and dialysis 2023-02, Vol.27 (1), p.24-30
Hauptverfasser: Ulgen, Cansu, Ozturk, Ilyas, Sahin, Murat, Guzel, Fatma Betul, Oguz, Ayten, Altunoren, Orcun, Gungor, Ozkan
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container_end_page 30
container_issue 1
container_start_page 24
container_title Therapeutic apheresis and dialysis
container_volume 27
creator Ulgen, Cansu
Ozturk, Ilyas
Sahin, Murat
Guzel, Fatma Betul
Oguz, Ayten
Altunoren, Orcun
Gungor, Ozkan
description Introduction Sarcopenia was determined to be associated with increased arterial stiffness in the nondialysis patient population, but there is no available data on this subject in dialysis patients. Methods A total of 79 patients were included in the study. Sarcopenia was diagnosed according to the EWSGOP‐2 criteria. Arterial stiffness was measured noninvasively with a mobile‐O‐Graph device. Results Skeletal muscle mass was observed to be positively correlated with weight, body mass index, creatinine, and uric acid, while negatively correlated with augmentation index. There was a correlation between augmentation index and sodium, phosphorus, systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, cardiac index, muscle percentage, fat percentage, and skeletal muscle mass. When the determinants of augmentation index in the linear regression analysis were viewed, just the systolic blood pressure and skeletal muscle mass were observed to be the determinant. Conclusion Decreased skeletal muscle mass contributes to increased arterial stiffness in hemodialysis patients.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/1744-9987.13853
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Methods A total of 79 patients were included in the study. Sarcopenia was diagnosed according to the EWSGOP‐2 criteria. Arterial stiffness was measured noninvasively with a mobile‐O‐Graph device. Results Skeletal muscle mass was observed to be positively correlated with weight, body mass index, creatinine, and uric acid, while negatively correlated with augmentation index. There was a correlation between augmentation index and sodium, phosphorus, systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, cardiac index, muscle percentage, fat percentage, and skeletal muscle mass. When the determinants of augmentation index in the linear regression analysis were viewed, just the systolic blood pressure and skeletal muscle mass were observed to be the determinant. 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Methods A total of 79 patients were included in the study. Sarcopenia was diagnosed according to the EWSGOP‐2 criteria. Arterial stiffness was measured noninvasively with a mobile‐O‐Graph device. Results Skeletal muscle mass was observed to be positively correlated with weight, body mass index, creatinine, and uric acid, while negatively correlated with augmentation index. There was a correlation between augmentation index and sodium, phosphorus, systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, cardiac index, muscle percentage, fat percentage, and skeletal muscle mass. When the determinants of augmentation index in the linear regression analysis were viewed, just the systolic blood pressure and skeletal muscle mass were observed to be the determinant. 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source MEDLINE; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects arterial stiffness
Blood Pressure - physiology
hemodialysis
Humans
Muscle, Skeletal
Renal Dialysis
sarcopenia
Sarcopenia - etiology
Vascular Stiffness - physiology
title The amount of skeletal muscle mass is associated with arterial stiffness in hemodialysis patients
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