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Review
. 2013 May;23(3):157-63.
doi: 10.1053/j.jrn.2012.11.001. Epub 2013 Jan 10.

Let them eat during dialysis: an overlooked opportunity to improve outcomes in maintenance hemodialysis patients

Affiliations
Review

Let them eat during dialysis: an overlooked opportunity to improve outcomes in maintenance hemodialysis patients

Kamyar Kalantar-Zadeh et al. J Ren Nutr. 2013 May.

Abstract

In individuals with chronic kidney disease, surrogates of protein-energy wasting, including a relatively low serum albumin and fat or muscle wasting, are by far the strongest death risk factor compared with any other condition. There are data to indicate that hypoalbuminemia responds to nutritional interventions, which may save lives in the long run. Monitored, in-center provision of high-protein meals and/or oral nutritional supplements during hemodialysis is a feasible, inexpensive, and patient-friendly strategy despite concerns such as postprandial hypotension, aspiration risk, infection control and hygiene, dialysis staff burden, diabetes and phosphorus control, and financial constraints. Adjunct pharmacologic therapies can be added, including appetite stimulators (megesterol, ghrelin, and mirtazapine), anabolic hormones (testosterone and growth factors), antimyostatin agents, and antioxidative and anti-inflammatory agents (pentoxiphylline and cytokine modulators), to increase efficiency of intradialytic food and oral supplementation, although adequate evidence is still lacking. If more severe hypoalbuminemia (<3.0 g/dL) not amenable to oral interventions prevails, or if a patient is not capable of enteral interventions (e.g., because of swallowing problems), then parenteral interventions such as intradialytic parenteral nutrition can be considered. Given the fact that meals and supplements during hemodialysis would require only a small fraction of the funds currently used for dialysis patients this is also an economically feasible strategy.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Justification of the additional need of dialysis patients to supplemented meals and nutrition
Figure 2
Figure 2
Anabolic effects of oral versus parenteral nutrition during hemodialysis treatment to justify preference for meals and oral supplements during hemodialysis treatment (this figure is adapted from Kalantar-Zadeh et al and Pupim et al)

References

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