Background: Poor sleep quality is reported to be common in hemodialysis patients. However, limited data are available about its prevalence in sub-Saharan region. The aim of this study was to assessed sleep quality and its predictors among hemodialysis patients. Methods: We conducted a cross sectional study of 2 weeks in the Douala General Hospital hemodialysis center of Cameroon involving 46 chronic hemodialyzed patients for at least six months with arteriovenous fistula. Quality of sleep was measured using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) and laboratory data were collected in patients'' fields. Result: Thirty-five (76.1%) subjects reported poor sleep quality. The most frequent abnormal sleep components were subjective sleep quality, sleep disturbances and sleep latency (87%, 85% and 76% respectively). In univariate linear regression, hemoglobin level, sleep quality, sleep latency, sleep duration, habitual sleep efficiency and sleep disturbance were associated with poor sleep quality. In multivariate linear regression only hemoglobin level (p = 0.004) and sleep latency (p = 0.002) were associated with poor sleep quality. Conclusion: Poor sleep quality is frequent in our hemodialysis patients and hemoglobin seems to be a good predictor of sleep quality in these patients.
Introduction: Pediatric Acute Kidney Injury (AKI) seems to be a major cause of morbidity and mortality in Subsahara Africa. However, data on its epidemiology are scare and mainly originate from tertiary and urban health facilities such as large university Teaching hospitals with a nephrology service. Objective: The aim of this study was to compare the epidemiology of pediatric AKI in urban and semi-urban health facility. Patients and method: We conducted a retrospective study of 16 months in a tertiary urban hospital (General Hospital of Douala) and a secondary semi-urban health facility (Region hospital of Buea). Diagnostic of AKI was done using usual criteria. Age, sex distribution, etiologies of AKI, access to dialysis, renal recovery at hospital discharge, at 1 and 3 months and patient survival at hospital discharge was compared. Results: A total of 31 patients were included (GD 17 and RHB 14). Boys were more prevalent in the semi-urban setting (86% Vs 47% p = 0.029). Median age was comparable in the both group although most semi-rural patient were older (6.5 Vs 10 years p = 0.093). Hospital acquired AKI was only found in urban setting and account for 40% of pediatric urban AKI. Malaria related AKI (mainly black water fever) and sepsis were the main etiologies of AKI in urban and semi-urban milieu.
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