Resistance (exercise) training in non-dialysis dependent chronic kidney disease (CKD stage 3) and validation of ultrasound in the measurement of muscle size and structure in haemodialysis patients (CKD stage 5)

Aim: This thesis set out to make an original contribution to knowledge with regard to methods of assessing muscle size and architecture in the CKD and ESRD population, and to assess the ability to improve the muscle size and architecture, and symptoms of uraemia, by implementing an anabolic interven...

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Main Author: Geneen, Louise
Published: Queen Margaret University 2014
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Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.640177
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6401772019-01-04T03:20:23ZResistance (exercise) training in non-dialysis dependent chronic kidney disease (CKD stage 3) and validation of ultrasound in the measurement of muscle size and structure in haemodialysis patients (CKD stage 5)Geneen, Louise2014Aim: This thesis set out to make an original contribution to knowledge with regard to methods of assessing muscle size and architecture in the CKD and ESRD population, and to assess the ability to improve the muscle size and architecture, and symptoms of uraemia, by implementing an anabolic intervention (resistance exercise training) in the CKD population. Outcome measures: Ultrasound was shown to have high validity (against gold standard MRI measures; ICCs: VLACSA 0.96, VL depth 0.99, fat depth 0.98) and intra-rater reliability (ICCs: VL depth 0.98, total muscle depth 0.97, fat depth 0.99; MDC: VL depth 0.14cm, total muscle depth 0.19cm, fat depth 0.22cm) in measuring regional body composition at the mid-VL site in the CKD population. There were significant (p<0.01) correlations between US-derived measures of (mid-VL) muscle size and architecture with strength and function (larger muscle mass and/or pennation angle positively correlated with higher strength and/or functional performance). Patient-reported uraemic symptoms were worse (p<0.01) in those with reduced strength and/or function. Intervention results: An anabolic (resistance training) intervention (12-weeks, randomized to once [RT1 n=7] or three times [RT3 n=10] per week, 80%1RM) brought about significant improvements over time (p<0.01) in all measures of muscle size and architecture (VL depth, total muscle depth, VLACSA, pennation angle). Interaction effects (group*time) were only seen in pennation angle (p<0.05) and VLACSA (p<0.01) where RT3 gains were greater than RT1 from week 8 onwards. All measures of strength, function, and uraemic symptoms improved over time (p<0.01) with no interaction effects (no difference from greater training frequency/ volume). Clinical and research implications: The intervention results suggest implementing a RT form of “prehabilitation” in early stage (CKD3) patients just once per week is sufficient to bring about statistically and clinically important changes in strength and function that benefit the patient through reduced frequency and/or intrusiveness of uraemic symptoms (improved health-related quality of life), with minimal time-commitment. Further research should examine if there is additional benefit to the significantly greater increases in VLACSA and pennation angle observed in RT3, with regards to long-term maintenance of functional improvements, and whether an RT1 or RT3 programme delays the progression of CKD, the need for RRT, and patient mortality.615.8PhysiotherapyQueen Margaret Universityhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.640177https://eresearch.qmu.ac.uk/handle/20.500.12289/7416Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 615.8
Physiotherapy
spellingShingle 615.8
Physiotherapy
Geneen, Louise
Resistance (exercise) training in non-dialysis dependent chronic kidney disease (CKD stage 3) and validation of ultrasound in the measurement of muscle size and structure in haemodialysis patients (CKD stage 5)
description Aim: This thesis set out to make an original contribution to knowledge with regard to methods of assessing muscle size and architecture in the CKD and ESRD population, and to assess the ability to improve the muscle size and architecture, and symptoms of uraemia, by implementing an anabolic intervention (resistance exercise training) in the CKD population. Outcome measures: Ultrasound was shown to have high validity (against gold standard MRI measures; ICCs: VLACSA 0.96, VL depth 0.99, fat depth 0.98) and intra-rater reliability (ICCs: VL depth 0.98, total muscle depth 0.97, fat depth 0.99; MDC: VL depth 0.14cm, total muscle depth 0.19cm, fat depth 0.22cm) in measuring regional body composition at the mid-VL site in the CKD population. There were significant (p<0.01) correlations between US-derived measures of (mid-VL) muscle size and architecture with strength and function (larger muscle mass and/or pennation angle positively correlated with higher strength and/or functional performance). Patient-reported uraemic symptoms were worse (p<0.01) in those with reduced strength and/or function. Intervention results: An anabolic (resistance training) intervention (12-weeks, randomized to once [RT1 n=7] or three times [RT3 n=10] per week, 80%1RM) brought about significant improvements over time (p<0.01) in all measures of muscle size and architecture (VL depth, total muscle depth, VLACSA, pennation angle). Interaction effects (group*time) were only seen in pennation angle (p<0.05) and VLACSA (p<0.01) where RT3 gains were greater than RT1 from week 8 onwards. All measures of strength, function, and uraemic symptoms improved over time (p<0.01) with no interaction effects (no difference from greater training frequency/ volume). Clinical and research implications: The intervention results suggest implementing a RT form of “prehabilitation” in early stage (CKD3) patients just once per week is sufficient to bring about statistically and clinically important changes in strength and function that benefit the patient through reduced frequency and/or intrusiveness of uraemic symptoms (improved health-related quality of life), with minimal time-commitment. Further research should examine if there is additional benefit to the significantly greater increases in VLACSA and pennation angle observed in RT3, with regards to long-term maintenance of functional improvements, and whether an RT1 or RT3 programme delays the progression of CKD, the need for RRT, and patient mortality.
author Geneen, Louise
author_facet Geneen, Louise
author_sort Geneen, Louise
title Resistance (exercise) training in non-dialysis dependent chronic kidney disease (CKD stage 3) and validation of ultrasound in the measurement of muscle size and structure in haemodialysis patients (CKD stage 5)
title_short Resistance (exercise) training in non-dialysis dependent chronic kidney disease (CKD stage 3) and validation of ultrasound in the measurement of muscle size and structure in haemodialysis patients (CKD stage 5)
title_full Resistance (exercise) training in non-dialysis dependent chronic kidney disease (CKD stage 3) and validation of ultrasound in the measurement of muscle size and structure in haemodialysis patients (CKD stage 5)
title_fullStr Resistance (exercise) training in non-dialysis dependent chronic kidney disease (CKD stage 3) and validation of ultrasound in the measurement of muscle size and structure in haemodialysis patients (CKD stage 5)
title_full_unstemmed Resistance (exercise) training in non-dialysis dependent chronic kidney disease (CKD stage 3) and validation of ultrasound in the measurement of muscle size and structure in haemodialysis patients (CKD stage 5)
title_sort resistance (exercise) training in non-dialysis dependent chronic kidney disease (ckd stage 3) and validation of ultrasound in the measurement of muscle size and structure in haemodialysis patients (ckd stage 5)
publisher Queen Margaret University
publishDate 2014
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.640177
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