Baccioglu Ayse, Gulbay Banu Eris, Acıcan Turan
Department of Pulmonary Diseases, Division of Immunology and Allergy Diseases, Kirikkale University Faculty of Medicine, Kirikkale, Turkey.
Department of Pulmonary Diseases, Ankara University Faculty of Medicine, Ankara, Turkey.
Eurasian J Med. 2014 Oct;46(3):169-75. doi: 10.5152/eajm.2014.46. Epub 2014 Aug 26.
Although malnutrition (body mass index (BMI)<18.5kg/ m(2)) has been associated with impaired health status in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), the effects of body composition (body fat and protein percentage) in patients with COPD have not been clearly demonstrated.
A total of 180 stable patients with COPD at the stages of moderate, severe, very severe, and 50 healthy subjects were included in this prospective study. All subjects underwent a clinical evaluation, spirometry tests, anthropometric measurements and blood analysis.
Frequency of underweight was higher in COPD (11.7%) patients than the control group (8%). The frequency of underweight increased as the severity of COPD worsens. There was body decomposition (protein or fat depletion) in not only all underweight patients but also some normal/overweight COPD patients, as well as in the healthy subjects. Deterioration in FEV1 (L), and FEV1/FVC was more evident in underweight patients with protein and fat depletion compared to normal/overweight patients (p=0.004, and p=0.005). Inspiratory and expiratory respiratory muscle power was lower in under-weight patients with depletion than in normal/overweight patients (p=0.02, and p=0.01). DLCO and DLCO/VA were significantly lower in underweight patients than in normal/overweight patients (p=0.003, and p=0.004), they were also lower in normal/overweight patients with depletion than in normal/overweight patients with no depletion (p=0.01, and p=0.07). Normal/overweight patients with protein depletion had the most frequent number of exacerbations than others (p=0.04).
These results show that the body decomposition is important in patients with COPD. Assessment of body composition should be a part of nutritional assessment besides BMI in patients with COPD.
虽然营养不良(体重指数(BMI)<18.5kg/m²)与慢性阻塞性肺疾病(COPD)患者的健康状况受损有关,但COPD患者身体成分(体脂和蛋白质百分比)的影响尚未得到明确证实。
本前瞻性研究纳入了180例中度、重度、极重度稳定期COPD患者以及50名健康受试者。所有受试者均接受了临床评估、肺功能测试、人体测量和血液分析。
COPD患者(11.7%)体重过轻的发生率高于对照组(8%)。体重过轻的发生率随着COPD严重程度的加重而增加。不仅所有体重过轻的患者,而且一些正常/超重的COPD患者以及健康受试者都存在身体成分分解(蛋白质或脂肪消耗)。与正常/超重患者相比,蛋白质和脂肪消耗的体重过轻患者的第一秒用力呼气容积(FEV1,L)和FEV1/用力肺活量(FVC)恶化更为明显(p=0.004和p=0.005)。与正常/超重患者相比,消耗的体重过轻患者的吸气和呼气呼吸肌力量较低(p=0.02和p=0.01)。体重过轻患者的一氧化碳弥散量(DLCO)和DLCO/肺泡通气量(VA)显著低于正常/超重患者(p=0.003和p=0.004),在有消耗的正常/超重患者中也低于无消耗的正常/超重患者(p=0.01和p=0.07)。蛋白质消耗的正常/超重患者的急性加重次数比其他患者最多(p=0.04)。
这些结果表明身体成分分解在COPD患者中很重要。除BMI外,身体成分评估应成为COPD患者营养评估的一部分。