1993
DOI: 10.1164/ajrccm/147.5.1151
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Prevalence and Characteristics of Nutritional Depletion in Patients with Stable COPD Eligible for Pulmonary Rehabilitation

Abstract: Prevalence and characteristics of nutritional depletion were established by body composition measurements in 255 COPD patients in stable clinical condition admitted to a pulmonary rehabilitation center. Depletion of body weight, fat-free mass (using bioelectrical resistance measurements), and muscle mass [from creatinine height index (CHI) and midarm muscle circumference] was most pronounced (40 to 50%) in patients suffering from chronic hypoxemia and in normoxemic patients with severe airflow obstruction (FEV… Show more

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Cited by 610 publications
(461 citation statements)
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“…The independent association between chronic obstructive airways disease and poor nutrition has been well documented (Schols et al, 1993), it being one of the chronic wasting diseases. A negative energy balance has been shown to be the predominant cause among Hong Kong Chinese patients (Tang et al, 2002).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…The independent association between chronic obstructive airways disease and poor nutrition has been well documented (Schols et al, 1993), it being one of the chronic wasting diseases. A negative energy balance has been shown to be the predominant cause among Hong Kong Chinese patients (Tang et al, 2002).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Patients were classified according to body composition [8]. Weight <90% ideal body weight is an accepted indicator of nutritional depletion.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The hypotheses were that nutritional depletion was highly prevalent in this setting, and that pulmonary function in chronic respiratory failure was related in part to body composition [8]. It was also postulated that lean body mass depletion was a risk factor for higher mortality while awaiting, and after, LT.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Traditionally, reference values for fat‐free mass index (FFMI) in COPD were developed based on age‐specific and gender‐specific 10th percentile values 8. These reference values were defined as abnormally low, based on well‐established adverse effects of low FFMI on physical performance and survival in normal to underweight COPD patients 7, 11. However, this might underestimate low muscle mass in the increasing proportion of overweight to obese COPD patients 23.…”
Section: Recent Developments In Identifying Muscle Wasting In Copdmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Extra‐pulmonary degenerative manifestations that may occur in COPD include osteoporosis6 and muscle wasting. The prevalence of muscle wasting is relatively high in COPD: 15–40% depending on definition and disease stage 7, 8. Importantly, muscle wasting not only contributes to diminished skeletal muscle function, reduced exercise capacity, and decreased health status,9, 10 but is also a determinant of mortality in COPD, independent of airflow obstruction 8, 11…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%