Department of Medicine, University of Otago Christchurch, Christchurch, New Zealand.
Centre for Kidney Research, The Children's Hospital at Westmead, Sydney, Australia.
Am J Kidney Dis. 2015 Apr;65(4):559-73. doi: 10.1053/j.ajkd.2014.09.012. Epub 2014 Nov 6.
Managing the complex fluid and diet requirements of chronic kidney disease (CKD) is challenging for patients. We aimed to summarize patients' perspectives of dietary and fluid management in CKD to inform clinical practice and research.
Systematic review of qualitative studies.
SETTING & POPULATION: Adults with CKD who express opinions about dietary and fluid management.
SEARCH STRATEGY & SOURCES: MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsycINFO, CINAHL, Google Scholar, reference lists, and PhD dissertations were searched to May 2013.
Thematic synthesis.
We included 46 studies involving 816 patients living in middle- to high-income countries. Studies involved patients treated with facility-based and home hemodialysis (33 studies; 462 patients), peritoneal dialysis (10 studies; 112 patients), either hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis (3 studies; 73 patients), kidney transplant recipients (9 studies; 89 patients), and patients with non-dialysis-dependent CKD stages 1 to 5 (5 studies; 80 patients). Five major themes were identified: preserving relationships (interference with roles, social limitations, and being a burden), navigating change (feeling deprived, disrupting held truths, breaking habits and norms, being overwhelmed by information, questioning efficacy, and negotiating priorities), fighting temptation (resisting impositions, experiencing mental invasion, and withstanding physiologic needs), optimizing health (accepting responsibility, valuing self-management, preventing disease progression, and preparing for and protecting a transplant), and becoming empowered (comprehending paradoxes, finding solutions, and mastering change and demands).
Limited data in non-English languages and low-income settings and for adults with CKD not treated with hemodialysis.
Dietary and fluid restrictions are disorienting and an intense burden for patients with CKD. Patient-prioritized education strategies, harnessing patients' motivation to stay well for a transplant or to avoid dialysis, and viewing adaptation to restrictions as a collaborative journey are suggested strategies to help patients adjust to dietary regimens in order to reduce their impact on quality of life.
管理慢性肾脏病(CKD)患者的复杂液体和饮食需求具有挑战性。我们旨在总结患者对 CKD 饮食和液体管理的看法,以为临床实践和研究提供信息。
对定性研究的系统评价。
对饮食和液体管理表达意见的 CKD 成年患者。
2013 年 5 月之前,在 MEDLINE、EMBASE、PsycINFO、CINAHL、Google Scholar、参考文献列表和博士论文中进行了检索。
主题综合。
我们纳入了 46 项研究,涉及居住在中高收入国家的 816 名患者。这些研究涉及接受住院血液透析(33 项研究;462 名患者)、腹膜透析(10 项研究;112 名患者)、血液透析或腹膜透析(3 项研究;73 名患者)、肾移植受者(9 项研究;89 名患者)以及非透析依赖的 CKD 1 至 5 期患者(5 项研究;80 名患者)。确定了五个主要主题:保持关系(干扰角色、社会限制和成为负担)、改变导航(感到被剥夺、破坏既定观念、打破习惯和规范、被信息淹没、质疑功效和优先事项协商)、抵制诱惑(抵制强制、经历精神入侵和忍受生理需求)、优化健康(承担责任、重视自我管理、预防疾病进展以及为移植做准备和保护)和获得授权(理解悖论、寻找解决方案以及掌握变化和需求)。
数据仅限于非英语语言和低收入环境以及未接受血液透析治疗的 CKD 成年患者。
饮食和液体限制对 CKD 患者来说是令人迷失方向的、巨大的负担。建议采取以患者为中心的教育策略,利用患者为移植或避免透析而保持健康的动机,以及将适应限制视为协作之旅的策略,以帮助患者适应饮食方案,从而减少对生活质量的影响。