6533b7dbfe1ef96bd1270b42

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Quality of Life and Stressors in Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease Depending on Treatment

Josep CrespoAnna AbadSonia Martínez-sanchisM Consuelo BernalLuis M PallardóJosé Vicente Montagud

subject

AdultMaleLinguistics and Languagemedicine.medical_specialtymedicine.medical_treatmentLanguage and LinguisticsPeritoneal dialysisYoung AdultQuality of lifeInternal medicinemedicineHumansRenal Insufficiency ChronicGeneral PsychologyDialysisDepression (differential diagnoses)AgedStressorMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseRenal Replacement TherapyMoodQuality of LifeAnxietyFemalemedicine.symptomPsychologyStress PsychologicalClinical psychologyKidney disease

description

AbstractThis study evaluated health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in a Spanish sample of chronic kidney disease patients (n= 90) undergoing different renal replacement therapies, considering the influence of treatment stressors, mood, anxiety and quality of sleep. While all patients had worse physical functioning than controls (p< .01), only those undergoing haemodialysis (HD) showed worse physical well-being, occupational functioning, spiritual fulfillment and more health interference with work (p< .05). They also obtained higher depression scores than renal transplant patients (TX) (p= .005). Those TX receiving the immunosuppressor sirolimus exhibited more cardiac/renal, cognitive and physical limitations than the rest (p< .05). Dialysis vintage correlated positively with sleep disturbances and depression scores and negatively with total Quality of Life (QLI) (p< .05). HD patients experienced more psychological distress than peritoneal dialysis patients (PD) (p= .036). Regression models including sleep, anxiety and depression were estimated for subscales of HRQOL. In TX patients, low depressive scores related to an optimal QLI in almost all subscales, while in HD patients they explained part of the variability in psychological well-being, interpersonal functioning and personal fulfillment. HD condition results in a QLI more distant to the standards of controls.

https://doi.org/10.1017/sjp.2015.17