AI Article Synopsis

  • Fatigue is a common symptom in heart failure (HF) patients, but its underlying causes are not well understood, particularly the role of fluid volume and serum osmolality.
  • Researchers aimed to investigate the connection between serum osmolality levels and fatigue in HF patients by analyzing data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey.
  • The study found that HF patients who reported fatigue had significantly lower serum osmolality levels, and higher serum osmolality was linked to lower odds of experiencing fatigue, suggesting that low serum osmolality may relate to fluid overload and neurohormonal activity contributing to fatigue.

Article Abstract

Background: Fatigue is a prominent symptom of heart failure (HF). However, underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood. Fluid volume status has been suggested as a physiologic mechanism of HF-related fatigue. Serum osmolality may fluctuate with changes in volume status associated with neurohormonal dysregulation. The relationship of fatigue to serum osmolality has not been assessed in adults with HF.

Objectives: Describe the relationship between serum osmolality and fatigue in adults with HF.

Methods: We analyzed two waves of cross-sectional data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (2015-2016 and 2017-2018). Adults who self-reported having HF without select co-morbid conditions known to contribute to fatigue were included. Data were weighted to provide US national estimates, and complex sample design used for analyses. Sequential logistic regression was used to isolate the effect of serum osmolality on the odds of having fatigue.

Results: Data from the sample represented 1.4 million Americans with HF (58.5 % male; median age 68 years), of whom 1,001,589 (67.9 %) reported fatigue. Participants with fatigue had lower serum osmolality compared to those without fatigue (t = -3.04, p = .009). Higher serum osmolality was associated with 8.8 % lower odds of experiencing fatigue when controlling for sex and body mass index (OR = 0.912, p = .007, CI 0.857 - 0.972).

Conclusions: HF-related fatigue is associated with lower serum osmolality. Low serum osmolality may indicate excess volume and the presence of a heightened neurohormonal response, both of which may influence fatigue. Alternatively, serum osmolality may directly affect other physiologic changes that may contribute to fatigue.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.hrtlng.2024.08.012DOI Listing

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