Cognitive changes in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) appear to correlate with accompanying changes in body mass index (BMI) and cerebral regional oxygen saturation (rSO2), reports a recent longitudinal study.
Sixty-eight CKD patients (mean age 68.8 years, 72 percent men) participated in the present study. Cerebral rSO2 was measured using a real-time saturation monitor, while the mini-mental state examination (MMSE) was used to evaluate cognitive function.
Patients were followed-up after a median of 364 days, after which the MMSE scores were significantly higher as opposed to baseline (p=0.022). Cognitive impairment, as qualified by MMSE scores, were also less prevalent at follow-up than at the index date, though the difference did not achieve significance.
Specifically, researchers noted significant increases in the scores regarding the domain of orientation (p=0.02) and calculation (p=0.046) domains of MMSE, while small but significant reductions were reported for orientation of time (p=0.03).
Multivariable linear regression analysis revealed that changes in BMI were significantly and positively correlated with cognitive changes from baseline (standardized coefficient, 0.260, 95 percent confidence interval [CI], 0.023–0.088; p=0.023). The same was true for cerebral rSO2 (standardized coefficient, 0.345; 95 percent CI, 0.045–0.208; p=0.003). Serum albumin was also associated with changes in MMSE but only in unadjusted analysis (r, 0.268; p=0.027).
“Further prospective studies, with a larger number of CKD patients and a longer observational period, are needed to clarify whether maintaining BMI and cerebral oxygenation improves or prevents deterioration of cognitive function in CKD patients without dialysis therapy,” the researchers said.