Abstract

BackgroundFatigue is prevalent in hemodialysis patients who for survival follow a strict dialysis treatment regimen – dialysis and non-dialysis days. As a result, the daily activities, symptom burden, and clinical outcomes of hemodialysis patients vary significantly between dialysis and non-dialysis days. Fatigue is one of the most reported debilitating symptoms by hemodialysis patients with profound negative impact on their quality of life. Prior studies assessed fatigue during the preceding 7 or 30 days and did not discriminate fatigue characteristics between dialysis and non-dialysis days. We aimed to characterize and compare fatigue severity and fatigue interference with daily activities between dialysis and non-dialysis days.MethodsHemodialysis patients self-reported fatigue on consecutive dialysis and non-dialysis days using the 9-item Brief Fatigue Inventory. The differences in fatigue characteristics between dialysis and non-dialysis days were analyzed using one-way ANCOVA.ResultsGlobal fatigue burden was worse on a dialysis day compared to a non-dialysis day (P for all < 0.001). Age and education were associated with fatigue, but hemodialysis-related variables were not. A significant inverse association of physical activity with fatigue severity observed on non-dialysis day; there was also a negative association between the normalized protein catabolic rate and fatigue severity on both dialysis and non-dialysis days. The positive association of depression with fatigue severity and fatigue interference were consistent on both dialysis and non-dialysis days. None of these factors, however, explained differences in fatigue characteristics between dialysis and non-dialysis days.ConclusionsFatigue, measured in severity and interference, was more pronounced on a dialysis day relative to a non-dialysis day. These differences were not explained by age, sex, education, hemodialysis-related variables, habitual exercise, nutritional status, and or depression. The quantitative measures of fatigue characteristics may facilitate future interventional trials design and better fatigue management for hemodialysis patients.

Highlights

  • Fatigue is prevalent in hemodialysis patients who for survival follow a strict dialysis treatment regimen – dialysis and non-dialysis days

  • Fatigue severity level was significantly pronounced on a dialysis day compared to a non-dialysis day, 5.35 ± 2.50 and 3.47 ± 2.85, P < 0.0001, respectively (Table 2)

  • This study extends our current knowledge of the nature of fatigue by demonstrating its characteristics on both dialysis and non-dialysis days

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Summary

Introduction

Fatigue is prevalent in hemodialysis patients who for survival follow a strict dialysis treatment regimen – dialysis and non-dialysis days. Kidney failure patients on maintenance hemodialysis treatment endure multitude of symptoms and rank fatigue as one of the most dreadful symptoms which adversely affects their daily activities and quality of life [1,2,3,4] These patients prioritize relief of fatigue over survival [2, 5]. Hemodialysis patients follow a strict weekly treatment regimen – either MondayWednesday-Friday or Tuesday-Thursday-Saturday are dialysis days (treatment days) and remaining days are non-dialysis days (non-treatment days) Due to such unique and restrictive life pattern, the daily activities, symptom burden, and clinical outcomes of hemodialysis patients vary significantly between dialysis and nondialysis days. Little is known about the fatigue characteristics and magnitude of fatigue burden on dialysis and non-dialysis days

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