Clinical Features and Severity of Nonspecific Symptoms in Dialysis Patients
- 1 January 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by S. Karger AG in Nephron
- Vol. 50 (2) , 121-128
- https://doi.org/10.1159/000185141
Abstract
Nonspecific symptoms are common in dialysis patients but few methods are available to measure their severity and their response to alteration in dialysis therapy. To determine the clinical features and measure the severity of the most important symptoms in end-stage renal disease (ESRD) patients, 97 dialysis patients were interviewed, 63 of whom were reinterviewed 1 year later. For comparison 82 transplant recipients were also interviewed. The six most important symptoms in dialysis patients (using the product of the patient''s perception of severity and prevalence) were tiredness, cramps, pruritus, dyspnea, headaches and joint pain. The symptoms were long-standing, occurred frequently, with little difference in prevalance between hemo- and peritoneal dialysis patients, and were often unrelated to a hemodialysis session. For each symptom, several dimensions of severity were assessed including frequency, duration, effect on sleep, daily living, activity, subjective quality of life and necessity for drug therapy. Often these dimensions did nto correlate with pat ient''s perception of severity. For each symptom these items were combined to give an aggregate score with a range 0-10. Interobserver reproducibility for each symptom score was .gtoreq. 0.7 but intraobserver reproducibility was poor for 3 symptoms, because of the fluctuating nature of the symptoms. Construct validity was demonstrated by finding a significantly worse distribution of aggregate scores for tiredness, cramps, pruritus, dyspnea and nausea/vomiting in dialysis compared to transplant patients. Aggregate scores changed little after 1 year''s follow-up in stable dialysis patients but significant improvement in the aggregate scores for tiredness, dyspnea and nausea/vomiting were observed in 14 patients after successful transplantation. Multi-dimensional aggregate scores for individual symptoms should be useful in comparing the efficacy of various dialysis regimes and in determining the etiology of different symptoms, provided account is taken of the fluctuating nature of some of these symptoms.Keywords
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