Ra. Sherman et al., INTERDIALYTIC WEIGHT-GAIN AND NUTRITIONAL PARAMETERS IN CHRONIC-HEMODIALYSIS PATIENTS, American journal of kidney diseases, 25(4), 1995, pp. 579-583
The extent of interdialytic weight gain (IDWG) in chronic hemodialysis
patients is usually attributed to the level of compliance with fluid
restriction. However, in view of the substantial water content of food
(and caloric content of beverages), IDWG also may be a function of ca
lorie and protein intake and may reflect the nutritional state of pati
ents. To investigate this theory, the relationship between 2-day IDWG
and body weight, normalized protein catabolic rate (nPCR), serum album
in, and delivered Kt/V urea was assessed in a prospective, randomized
study of 860 chronic hemodialysis patients in 56 dialysis units. Compa
red with patients having <2 kg IDWG (n = 378), patients with >3 kg IDW
G (n = 138) weighed more (dry weight, 76.8 v 61.7 kg), had higher nPCR
(1.15 v 0.96 g/kg/d), and had higher serum albumin levels (3.96 v 3.7
9 g/dL (all P < 0.001) but did not have different levels of Kt/V (1.04
v 1.06). When IDWG was assessed as a function of dry weight, patients
with IDWG > 4.5% of dry weight (n = 151) had higher nPCR (1.17 v 0.94
g/kg/d) but weighed less (60.1 v 70.0 kg) and had a higher Kt/V (1.14
v 1.01) than patients with IDWG < 3% of dry weight (n = 355) (all P <
0.001). Artifactual association between IDWG and nPCR attributable to
an accentuated two-pool effect from differing ultrafiltration require
ments was unlikely as assessed by the relationship between modeled Kt/
V and prescribed Kt/V determined using an anthropometric urea volume.
A patient with an IDWG OF 1 to <2 kg was almost twice as likely (59.6%
v 30.4%) as a patient with an IDWG of 3 to < 4 kg to have an nPCR < 1
g/kg/d. The authors conclude that IDWG is an important nutritional pa
rameter. The possibility exists that patient compliance with dialysis
staff advice to limit IDWG may have an adverse nutritional impact. (C)
1995 by the National Kidney Foundation, Inc.