Exercise Performance Falls over Time in Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease Despite Maintenance of Hemoglobin Concentration
Physical function is limited in patients with kidney disease, although previous studies have been confounded by anemia. What is not clear is how physical performance changes over time as renal function deteriorates. A cohort of 12 patients (10 male, two female; mean +/- SD age 49 +/- 11 yr) who had...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Clinical journal of the American Society of Nephrology 2006-05, Vol.1 (3), p.488-495 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Physical function is limited in patients with kidney disease, although previous studies have been confounded by anemia. What is not clear is how physical performance changes over time as renal function deteriorates. A cohort of 12 patients (10 male, two female; mean +/- SD age 49 +/- 11 yr) who had stages 3 to 4 chronic kidney disease without previous anemia were examined, and nine were followed for a 2-yr period. Assessments were made of peak oxygen consumption (VO2peak) by cycle ergometry, leg extension strength, and fatigue on an isokinetic dynamometer and thigh muscle cross-sectional area (TMCSA) by computed tomography. At baseline, creatinine clearance was 31 +/- 13 ml/min and hemoglobin concentration ([Hb]) was 129 +/- 9 g/L. VO2peak was low (1.88 L/min, 82% of predicted), and maximal isometric voluntary contraction was 188 +/- 42 Nm, with a TMCSA of 144 +/- 27 cm2. VO2peak correlated with creatinine clearance corrected for body surface area (r = 0.613, P = 0.034) but not to [Hb]. VO2peak adjusted for patient weight correlated with leg fatigue (r = -0.693, P = 0.012). For those with follow-up tests, there were falls in renal function by 28% (P = 0.007) and VO2peak by 9% (P = 0.03), whereas [Hb] did not change. Leg strength fell across a range of isokinetic speeds (P = 0.04), whereas no change in TMCSA was observed. In conclusion, exercise performance as measured by aerobic (VO2peak) and leg strength tests were reduced in patients with stages 3 to 4 chronic kidney disease. As renal function declined over time, there was a corresponding decline in exercise performance even when [Hb] was maintained. |
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ISSN: | 1555-9041 1555-905X |
DOI: | 10.2215/CJN.01501005 |