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Spinning the legs and blood: should intradialytic exercise be routinely offered during maintenance haemodialysis?

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posted on 2021-12-21, 09:13 authored by Matthew PM Graham-Brown, William G Herrington, James O Burton
Patients with end-stage kidney disease on haemodialysis (HD) have an elevated risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD). These patients also experience high levels of physical deconditioning and programmes of rehabilitation have been tested in a variety of forms with variable success. It has been suggested that programmes of exercise rehabilitation have a role to play in improving the physical condition of patients on HD and in addressing the traditional and non-traditional risk factors that drive CVD for this population. Intradialytic exercise has often been suggested as a convenient way of delivering rehabilitation for patients on HD, as it makes use of otherwise dead time, but there are legitimate concerns about this group of at-risk patients undertaking exercise at a time when their myocardium is already vulnerable to the insults of demand ischaemia from the processes of dialysis and ultrafiltration. A study in this issue of Clinical Kidney Journal provides reassuring data, showing that cycling during dialysis potentially reduces evidence of demand ischaemia (episodes of myocardial stunning). Together with the safety and quality of life data, we expect from the multicentre PrEscription of Intra-Dialytic Exercise to Improve quAlity of Life in Patients With Chronic Kidney Disease study (the protocol for which is published concurrently), rehabilitation programmes that include intradialytic exercise are perhaps closer than ever for patients on HD.

History

Citation

Matthew P M Graham-Brown, William G Herrington, James O Burton, Spinning the legs and blood: should intradialytic exercise be routinely offered during maintenance haemodialysis?, Clinical Kidney Journal, Volume 14, Issue 5, May 2021, Pages 1297–1300, https://doi.org/10.1093/ckj/sfab018

Author affiliation

Department of Cardiovascular Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Clinical Kidney Journal

Volume

14

Issue

5

Pagination

1297 - 1300

Publisher

Oxford University Press, European Renal Association - European Dialysis and Transplant Association (ERA-EDTA)

issn

2048-8505

eissn

2048-8513

Acceptance date

2021-01-19

Copyright date

2021

Available date

2021-01-27

Language

en

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