ERI positively correlated with long-chain C18 acylcarnitine and negatively correlated with short-chain C5-OH acylcarnitine. C5-OH and C18 acylcarnitines at baseline might be contributing factors in distinguishing responders from nonresponders after L-carnitine administration.
Serum ferritin level and transferrin saturation (TSAT) are widely used to evaluate iron status in patients with chronic kidney disease, and are also important variables for performing statistical analyses. Many guidelines have set control targets or upper limits for these markers. Inter-method variability is an important consideration in iron control and statistical analysis. We used 10 ferritin assay kits and five iron/unsaturated iron-binding capacity/total iron-binding capacity assay kits to determine ferritin levels and TSAT in 114 patients on maintenance dialysis, and evaluated measurement bias using Passing-Bablok regression analyses. The variance of distributions categorized by differences in assay kits was examined using Fisher's exact test. Slopes ranged from 1.00 to 1.63 (1.00 to 0.61) for ferritin and 1.00 to 1.10 (1.00 to 0.91) for TSAT. The distribution according to the 2015 JSDT Guideline for Renal Anemia in Chronic Kidney Disease significantly changed (P = 0.01). TSAT thus provides more precise control than ferritin in multi-center comparisons where no particular assay is specified. Developers must reduce variability in serum ferritin assay kits. Researchers must analyze measured values by taking into account the propagation of errors, and clinicians must evaluate laboratory data carefully.
Following the crisis at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant caused by the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami, radioactive substances ((131) I, (134) Cs, (137) Cs) were detected in tap water throughout eastern Japan. There is now concern that internal exposure to radioactive substances in the dialysate could pose a danger to hemodialysis patients. Radioactive substances were measured in three hemodialysis facilities before and after purification of tap water for use in hemodialysis. Radioactive iodine was detected at levels between 13 and 15 Bq/kg in tap water from the three facilities, but was not detected by reverse osmosis membrane at any of the facilities. We confirmed that the amount of radioactive substances in dialysate fell below the limit of detection (7-8 Bq/kg) by reverse osmosis membrane. It is now necessary to clarify the maximum safe level of radiation in dialysate for chronic hemodialysis patients.
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