Frailty and protein-energy wasting in elderly patients with end stage kidney disease

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Abstract

Older people constitute an increasingly greater proportion of patients with advanced CKD, including those patients undergoing maintenance dialysis treatment. Frailty is a biologic syndrome of decreased reserve and resistance to stressors that results from cumulative declines across multiple physiologic systems and causes vulnerability to adverse outcomes. Frailty is common in elderly CKD patients, and it may be associatedwith protein-energywasting (PEW), sarcopenia, dynapenia, and other complications of CKD. Causes of frailtywith orwithout PEWin the elderly with CKDcan be classified into three categories: causes primarily caused by aging per se, advanced CKD per se, or a combination of both conditions. Frailty and PEW in elderly CKD patients are associated with impaired physical performance, disability, poorer quality of life, and reduced survival. Prevention and treatment of these conditions in the elderly CKD patients often require a multifaceted approach. Here, we examine the causes and consequences of these conditions and examine the interplay between frailty and PEW in elderly CKD patients. Copyright © 2013 by the American Society of Nephrology.

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APA

Kim, J. C., Kalantar-Zadeh, K., & Kopple, J. D. (2013, February 28). Frailty and protein-energy wasting in elderly patients with end stage kidney disease. Journal of the American Society of Nephrology. American Society of Nephrology. https://doi.org/10.1681/ASN.2012010047

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