| Literature DB >> 34743628 |
Paul N Bennett1,2, Clara Bohm3,4, Oksana Harasemiw3,4, Leanne Brown5, Iwona Gabrys6, Dev Jegatheesan7,8, David W Johnson7,8, Kelly Lambert9, Courtney J Lightfoot10, Jennifer MacRae11, Anthony Meade12, Kristen Parker13, Nicole Scholes-Robertson14, Krista Stewart15, Brett Tarca1, Nancy Verdin16, Angela Yee-Moon Wang17, Madeleine Warren16,18, Mike West19, Deborah Zimmerman20, Philip Kam-Tao Li21,22, Stephanie Thompson23.
Abstract
Life participation requiring physical activity and physical function is a key patient-reported outcome for people receiving peritoneal dialysis (PD). Clinician guidance is required from multidisciplinary sources regarding exercise and activity advice to address the specific needs of this group. From August 2020 through to June 2021, the Global Renal Exercise Network and the International Society for Peritoneal Dialysis reviewed the published literature and international clinical experience to develop a set of clinical practice points. A set of questions relevant to physical activity and exercise were developed from the perspective of a person receiving PD and were the basis for the practice point development. The GRADE framework was used to evaluate the quality of evidence and to guide clinical practice points. The review of the literature found sparse quality evidence, and thus the clinical practice points are generally based on the expert consensus of people receiving PD, PD exercise expert clinicians and experienced PD exercise researchers. Clinical practice points address timing of exercise and activity (post-catheter insertion, peritoneal space empty or full), the uptake of specific activities (work, sex, swimming, core exercise), potential adverse outcomes related to activity and exercise (exit site care, perspiration, cardiovascular compromise, fatigue, intra-abdominal pressure), the effect of exercise and activity on conditions of interest (mental health, obesity, frailty, low fitness) and exercise nutrition.Entities:
Keywords: Dialysate; dialysis; exercise; exit site; frailty; peritoneal dialysis; physical activity; symptoms
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34743628 DOI: 10.1177/08968608211055290
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Perit Dial Int ISSN: 0896-8608 Impact factor: 1.756