BACKGROUND
The serum creatinine level is significantly lower in well-nourished hemodialysis patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) than in their non-DM counterparts, despite the presence of anuria in these patients. The factors associated with this finding have not been determined.
PATIENTS AND METHODS
We evaluated the association of serum creatinine with handgrip strength (HGS) and lean body mass index (LMI) in a cross-sectional study of 102 DM and 208 non-DM hemodialysis patients to determine if poorer muscle quality in DM patients could explain the reduced level of serum creatinine. All the DM patients were well-nourished. Grip dynamometry and dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) were used to measure HGS and LMI, respectively.
RESULTS
The DM patients had a significantly lower serum creatinine level and HGS compared to the non-DM patients, but whole-body LMI and LMI of the upper limbs did not differ between the two groups of patients. The DM patients had significantly lower serum creatinine/whole-body LMI, serum creatinine/arm LMI, HGS/whole-body LMI, and HGS/arm LMI ratios. The serum creatinine level was significantly correlated with HGS and with whole-body and upper limb LMI in both groups of patients. However, regression analyses of LMI with serum creatinine and HGS gave significantly shallower slopes for the DM patients compared to the non-DM patients.
CONCLUSION
This suggests that the muscle strength generated per unit of muscle mass, which is reflected well by the serum creatinine level, is significantly reduced in DM hemodialysis patients. Therefore, our results show that the significantly lower serum creatinine levels in DM hemodialysis patients compared to non-DM hemodialysis patients may be explained by poor muscle quality rather than by reduced muscle mass or malnutrition.