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      Chronic Fatigue in Long-Term Peritoneal Dialysis Patients

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          Abstract

          Objective: Fatigue is a common symptom in long-term dialysis patients. This study investigated possible clinical factors which may cause the development of fatigue in patients receiving peritoneal dialysis (PD). We also investigated the relationship between total solute clearance (TSC) and fatigue symptoms in PD patients. Design: A cross-sectional study design was used to compare the clinical characteristics among groups of PD patients classified by different degrees of fatigue. The relationship among dialysis adequacy (including Kt/V<sub>urea</sub> and weekly creatinine clearance; C<sub>cr</sub>), clinical characteristics and fatigue symptoms were also assessed. Setting: The PD unit of a major university teaching hospital in Taipei, Taiwan. Patients: Consecutive patients who had received PD for a minimum duration of 4 months were recruited for participation in the study. Patients were excluded if they had a history of ischemic heart disease, severe heart failure (NYHA function III or IV), malignant neoplasm, active infection, major psychiatric problems, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or disturbed consciousness. Finally, a total of 64 patients, 31 of whom were receiving continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis and 33 who were receiving continuous cycling-assisted peritoneal dialysis, were enrolled in the study. Methods: Fatigue was evaluated using a specially designed questionnaire that includes fourteen items. Patients were divided into three groups according to their fatigue scores (FS): mild (FS, 0–3), moderate (FS, 4–8), and severe (FS, 9–14) fatigue. The demographic data, dialysis variables, and clinical parameters of patients were compared among these groups. The relationship between fatigue and TSC was also examined. Results: The FS were correlated with serum intact parathyroid hormone (iPTH) level and total cholesterol concentration (p < 0.05). A linear correlation was also noted between serum iPTH level and total cholesterol level. When the patients were divided into an adequate- and an inadequate-dialysis group according to values of TSC, Kt/V<sub>urea</sub> as well as weekly creatinine clearance, a significant correlation was found between weekly C<sub>cr</sub> and FS. Conclusion: This study has demonstrated that dialysis adequacy plays a key role in the development chronic fatigue. In addition, weekly C<sub>cr</sub> was better correlated with fatigue than Kt/V<sub>urea</sub>.

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          A population-based incidence study of chronic fatigue.

          Most research on syndromes of chronic fatigue has been conducted in clinical settings and is therefore subject to selection biases. We report a population-based incidence study of chronic fatigue (CF) and chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). Questionnaires assessing fatigue and emotional morbidity were sent to 695 adult men and women who had replied to a postal questionnaire survey 1 year earlier. Possible CFS cases, subjects with probable psychiatric disorder and normal controls were interviewed. Baseline fatigue score, the level of emotional morbidity and a physical attribution for fatigue were risk factors for developing CF. However, after adjusting for confounding, premorbid fatigue score was the only significant predictor. A minority of CF subjects, all female, had consulted their general practitioner; higher levels of both fatigue and emotional morbidity were associated with consultation. Possible CFS cases reported similar rates of current and past psychiatric disorder to psychiatric controls, but after controlling for fatigue or a diagnosis of neurasthenia the current rates were more similar to those of normal controls. Two new cases of CFS were confirmed. Both fatigue and emotional morbidity are integral components of chronic fatigue syndromes. The demographic and psychiatric associations of CFS in clinical studies are at least partly determined by selection biases. Given that triggering and perpetuating factors may differ in CFS, studies that examine the similarities and differences between chronic fatigue syndromes and psychiatric disorder should consider both the stage of the illness and the research setting.
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            Postinfectious fatigue: prospective cohort study in primary care

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              Fatigue during acute isovolemic anemiain healthy, resting humans.

              Transfusion guidelines recommend that clinicians assess patients for signs and symptoms of anemia before the transfusion of RBCs. However, studies of signs and symptoms associated with acute isovolemic anemia are limited. The objective of this study was to determine whether acute reduction of Hb concentration to 5 g per dL would result in fatigue, tachycardia, or hypotension in resting, young, healthy, isovolemic humans, and whether changes were reversible with RBC transfusion. Conscious, resting, healthy adults less than 35 years old (n = 8) underwent acute isovolemic hemodilution to Hb of 5 g per dL and self-scored their energy level at various Hb concentrations. Heart rate and blood pressure were also measured. For controls, measurements of each subject were made during a comparable period of rest without hemodilution. During acute isovolemic hemodilution, energy levels decreased progressively and were lower at Hb of 7, 6, and 5 g per dL than at baseline (p<0.01) or in control sessions (p<0.05). The energy level was lower at Hb 7 g per dL than at 14 ( p = 0.005), lower at Hb 6 g per dL than at 7 (p = 0.01), and lower at Hb 5 g per dL than at 6 (p =0.01). Energy levels rose and were not different from baseline or control levels after transfusion of all autologous RBCs. Similarly, median heart rate increased with hemodilution to Hb of 7, 6, and 5 g per dL and decreased with transfusion of autologous RBCs. Supine blood pressure did not decrease with isovolemic hemodilution. In resting, young, healthy humans, acute isovolemic anemia to Hb levels of 7, 6, and 5 g per dL results in decreased self-scored energy levels and in an increase in heart rate but not in hypotension. Changes in energy and heart rate are reversible with the transfusion of autologous RBCs.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                American Journal of Nephrology
                Am J Nephrol
                S. Karger AG
                0250-8095
                1421-9670
                December 1 2001
                December 28 2001
                : 21
                : 6
                : 479-485
                Article
                10.1159/000046652
                a234a52a-1c53-4690-a135-f1f7c8a9c983
                © 2001

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