J. Carretero Gómez , T.F. Galeano Fernández , A.S. Vidal Ríos , S. Tolosa Álvarez , M. Sánchez Herrera , C. García Carrasco , F.J. Monreal Periañez , P. González González , J.C. Arévalo Lorido
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective
This work aims to describe nutrition and sarcopenia in inpatients with heart failure (HF). It also aims to assess factors associated with in-hospital and short-term prognosis related to nutrition and sarcopenia.
Methods
We collected data on consecutive HF patients admitted to a single center's internal medicine ward. Patients were recruited in May and October 2021. Malnutrition was determined by the Mini Nutritional Assessment-Short Form (MNA-SF) and sarcopenia by the screening test, SARC-F scale, and handgrip strength test.
Results
190 patients were analyzed, mean age 82.1 (± 8.2), 54.2% women, median follow up 106 days. Patients were classified into three groups based on MNA-SF score: group 1 (12-14 points, no risk) included 50 patients, group 2 (8-12 points, high risk of malnutrition) included 81 patients, group 3 (0-7 points, malnourished) included 59 patients. Group 3 had significantly more inflammation (lower albumin and higher C-reactive Protein (CRP)) and congestion (mea-sured by NT-ProBNP levels). In-hospital mortality was related to poor muscle function, CRP, andNT-ProBNP, but not to malnutrition. The poorest short-term outcomes were related to malnutrition and comorbidity. However, when the variable of muscle function was introduced, it could act as a poor prognostic factor related to CRP and NT-ProBNP, which were the main determinantsof survival.
Conclusion
In malnourished patients with HF, inflammation and congestion were related to in-hospital mortality. Malnutrition along with comorbidity may play a role in decreasing short-term survival. Early identification through proactive nutritional and functional screenings should be a key element of assessing HF patients.
期刊介绍:
Revista Clínica Española published its first issue in 1940 and is the body of expression of the Spanish Society of Internal Medicine (SEMI).
The journal fully endorses the goals of updating knowledge and facilitating the acquisition of key developments in internal medicine applied to clinical practice. Revista Clínica Española is subject to a thorough double blind review of the received articles written in Spanish or English. Nine issues are published each year, including mostly originals, reviews and consensus documents.