Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0278080 (physical dependence)
1,658 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The great increase in the number of patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) can be explained by a number of reasons. Elderly patients present typical and peculiar clinical features, and nephrologists have to consider the frequent clinical complications related to old age, such as malnutrition and cachexia, cognitive impairment and physical dependence with walking disability and depression. All of these factors have led to the birth of geriatric nephrology. Geriatric nephrology needs to take into account the high prevalence of diabetes and vascular disease in the elderly, which is related to a poor prognosis, mainly related to cerebrocardiovascular mortality. Best everyday clinical practice should include an accurate evaluation of patients, including quality of life, to select the best therapeutic approach for each individual case. A careful and reasonable use of drugs in the elderly is also of importance.
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PMID:Geriatric nephrology. 2087 65

Frailty and sarcopenia are important concepts in the quest to prevent physical dependence, as geriatrics are shifting towards identifications of early stages of disability. Definitions of both sarcopenia and frailty are still developing, and both concepts clearly overlap in their physical aspects. Malnutrition (both undernutrition and obesity) plays a key role in the pathogenesis of frailty and sarcopenia. The quality of the diet along the lifespan has a close relation with the incidence of both entities, and nutritional interventions may be able to reduce the incidence or revert either of them. This brief review explores the role of energy and protein intake and other key nutrients on muscle function. Nutrition may be a key element of multimodal interventions for frailty and sarcopenia. The results of the "Sarcopenia and Physical fRailty IN older people: multi-componenT Treatment strategies" (SPRINTT) trial will offer key insights on the effect of such interventions in frail, sarcopenic older individuals.
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PMID:Nutrition, frailty, and sarcopenia. 2815 81

Strokes can significantly affect the autonomy and the ability of the patient to feed properly. Malnutrition after strokes increases the length of stay in hospital, increases mortality and aggravates disability. Nutritional support is a therapeutic that can be useful in the management of strokes and during the rehabilitation period. It may help to reduce the occurrence of complications due to the physical dependence associated with this condition. The objective of our study was to evaluate, through a questionnaire, the opinion of prescribing doctors working in the Department of Neurology of The FANN National Teaching Hospital in Dakar. The interest of the question resides in the fact that the Center does not have a dedicated nutritionist for inpatients. This was an opinion poll about their concerns about the nutritional status of patients in the therapeutic projects they propose during the stroke. The type of the chosen opinion poll was elementary, type random. The questionnaire was individual and consisted of five items of single-response and multiple-choice questions. The results of this study reveal that while the nutritional status of patients with limited autonomy in the service was a concern in the intentions of the prescribers, in practice it was not taken into account in therapeutic projects. To date, no structured protocol is available in cases of proven nutritional deterioration in patients. Nutritional management must be integrated into the overall management of Neurology patients, particularly in elderly victims of strokes.
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PMID:What is the nutritional status of your patients suffering from strokes. 3220 18