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Walter S. Watson

Southern General Hospital

Publishes on Nutrition and Health in Aging, Body Composition Measurement Techniques, Fibromyalgia and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Research. 22 papers and 840 citations.

22Publications
840Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Albumin Concentrations Are Primarily Determined by the Body Cell Mass and the Systemic Inflammatory Response in Cancer Patients With Weight Loss
Donald C. McMillan, Walter S. Watson, Patricia O'Gorman et al.|Nutrition and Cancer|2001
Cited by 458Open Access

The association between hypoalbuminemia and poor prognosis in patients with cancer is well recognized. However, the factors that contribute to the fall in albumin concentrations are not well understood. In the present study, we examined the relationship between circulating albumin concentrations, weight loss, the body cell mass (measured using total body potassium), and the presence of an inflammatory response (measured using C-reactive protein) in male patients (n = 40) with advanced lung or gastrointestinal cancer. Albumin concentrations were significantly correlated with the percent ideal body weight (r = 0.390, p < 0.05), extent of reported weight loss (r = -0.492, p < 0.01), percent predicted total body potassium (adjusted for age, height, and weight, r = 0.686, p < 0.001), and log10 C-reactive protein concentrations (r = -0.545, p < 0.001). On multiple regression analysis, the percent predicted total body potassium and log10 C-reactive protein concentrations accounted for 63% of the variation in albumin concentrations (r2 = 0.626, p < 0.001). The interrelationship between albumin, body cell mass, and the inflammatory response is consistent with the concept that the presence of an ongoing inflammatory response contributes to the progressive loss of these vital protein components of the body and the subsequent death of patients with advanced cancer.

Longitudinal study of body cell mass depletion and the inflammatory response in cancer patients
Donald C. McMillan, Hazel R. Scott, Walter S. Watson et al.|Nutrition and Cancer|1998
Cited by 115

There is recent evidence that the inflammatory response may be important in the disproportionate loss of body cell mass in cancer patients. To examine this further, 18 male patients with lung or gastrointestinal cancer were studied over a 12-week period. In addition to weight, anthropometry, C-reactive protein (marker of the inflammatory response), albumin, and total body potassium were measured at baseline and 12 weeks. When those patients who lost total body potassium were compared with those who had not, there was a significant increase in the baseline and 12-week C-reactive protein concentrations (p < 0.05). The reduction in total body potassium was also associated with a reduction in triceps skinfold thickness (p < 0.05). There were significant correlations between the mean C-reactive protein concentration and the relative (r = -0.846, p < 0.001) and absolute (r = -0.806, p < 0.001) change in total body potassium over the follow-up period. This study demonstrates the association of a chronic inflammatory response with the rate of loss of body cell mass observed in cancer patients.

Body composition in cachexia resulting from malignant and non-malignant diseases
Cited by 36

The body composition of 23 patients with cachexia resulting from malignant or benign inflammatory disease was studied. Skinfold thickness and radioisotope tracer measurements enabled us to estimate total body fat, lean body mass, the ratio of fat loss to lean body loss, erythrocyte and plasma volumes, total body water, extra-, and intracellular water volumes, total body potassium, and intracellular potassium concentration. The total body fat and lean body mass information suggests that the body composition in cancerous cachexia differs from that in cachexia caused by benign inflammatory disease, in that lean tissue appears to be better conserved in the former. The radioactive tracer studies showed that the cachectic patients were anemic, potassium-deficient, and overhydrated; however, fluid partitioning into extra- and intracellular compartments was normal.