Continuous Long-Term Physical Activity Monitoring in Hemodialysis Patients

Physical inactivity is common in patients receiving hemodialysis, but activity patterns throughout the day and in relation to dialysis are largely unknown. This knowledge gap can be addressed by long-term continuous activity monitoring, but this has not been attempted and may not be acceptable to pa...

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Veröffentlicht in:Kidney360 2022-09, Vol.3 (9), p.1545-1555
Hauptverfasser: Cohen, Brandon, Munugoti, Samhitha, Kotwani, Sonia, Randhawa, Lovepreet S, Dalezman, Solomon, Elters, Antonio C, Nam, Kate, Ibarra, Jose S, Venkataraman, Sandheep, Paredes, William, Ohri, Nitin, Abramowitz, Matthew K
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Physical inactivity is common in patients receiving hemodialysis, but activity patterns throughout the day and in relation to dialysis are largely unknown. This knowledge gap can be addressed by long-term continuous activity monitoring, but this has not been attempted and may not be acceptable to patients receiving dialysis. Ambulatory patients with end-stage kidney disease receiving thrice-weekly hemodialysis wore commercially available wrist-worn activity monitors for 6 months. Step counts were collected every 15 minutes and were linked to dialysis treatments. Physical function was assessed using the Short Physical Performance Battery (SPPB). Fast time to recovery from dialysis was defined as ≤2 hours. Mixed effects models were created to estimate step counts over time. Of 52 patients enrolled, 48 were included in the final cohort. The mean age was 60 years, and 75% were Black or Hispanic. Comorbidity burden was high, 38% were transported to and from dialysis by paratransit, and 79% had SPPB
ISSN:2641-7650
2641-7650
DOI:10.34067/KID.0002082022