Frailty in patients on dialysis

Gordon Chun‐Kau Chan(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Kamyar Kalantar‐Zadeh(UCLA Medical Center), Jack Kit‐Chung Ng(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Na Tian, Áine Burns(The Royal Free Hospital), Kai Ming Chow(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Cheuk‐Chun Szeto(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Philip Kam‐Tao Li(Chinese University of Hong Kong)
Kidney International
May 3, 2024
Cited by 70Open Access
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Abstract

Frailty is a condition that is frequently observed among patients undergoing dialysis. Frailty is characterized by a decline in both physiological state and cognitive state, leading to a combination of symptoms, such as weight loss, exhaustion, low physical activity level, weakness, and slow walking speed. Frail patients not only experience a poor quality of life, but also are at higher risk of hospitalization, infection, cardiovascular events, dialysis-associated complications, and death. Frailty occurs as a result of a combination and interaction of various medical issues in patients who are on dialysis. Unfortunately, frailty has no cure. To address frailty, a multifaceted approach is necessary, involving coordinated efforts from nephrologists, geriatricians, nurses, allied health practitioners, and family members. Strategies such as optimizing nutrition and chronic kidney disease-related complications, reducing polypharmacy by deprescription, personalizing dialysis prescription, and considering home-based or assisted dialysis may help slow the decline of physical function over time in subjects with frailty. This review discusses the underlying causes of frailty in patients on dialysis and examines the methods and difficulties involved in managing frailty among this group.


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