High Dietary Sodium Intake is Associated with Shorter Event-Free Survival in Patients with Heart Failure and Comorbid Diabetes.
Zyad Taher SalehTerry A LennieAbdullah S AlhuraniIssa M AlmansourHamza AlduraidiDebra K MoserPublished in: Clinical nursing research (2019)
The aim was to determine whether 24-hour urine sodium excretion predicted event-free survival of patients with heart failure (HF) and diabetes mellitus (DM). Twenty-four hour urine sodium, as an indicator of dietary sodium, was collected from 107 patients with HF and comorbid DM. Patients were followed for a median period of 337 days to determine time to the first event of either all-cause hospitalization or cardiac-related mortality. There were 44 patients (41%) who had an event of death or hospitalization. Cox regression showed that higher urine sodium (>3.8 gm/day) was associated with 2.8 times greater risk for an event than lower urine sodium after controlling for age, gender, New York Heart Association class (I/II vs. III/IV), left ventricular ejection fraction, and body mass index. These data suggest that dietary sodium restriction may be beneficial for patients with HF and DM.
Keyphrases
- ejection fraction
- free survival
- left ventricular
- body mass index
- aortic stenosis
- glycemic control
- heart failure
- blood pressure
- type diabetes
- cardiovascular disease
- acute myocardial infarction
- coronary artery disease
- cardiovascular events
- skeletal muscle
- atrial fibrillation
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- deep learning
- data analysis