The aims of the present prospective multicenter study were to assess the clinical tolerance and well being, the correlation between nPCr and Kt/V and the pretreatment β2-microglobulin level in patients sequentially treated with high-flux dialysis with ultrapure bicarbonate hemodialysis (HD; phase I) and predilution hemofiltration (HF) with on-line prepared bicarbonate substitution fluid (phase II). The same monitor (Gambro AK 100 ULTRA®) and membrane (polyamide) were used. Twenty-three patients, all in a stable clinical condition, entered the study. The treatment was targeted to an equilibrated Kt/V (eqKt/V) of 1.4 for HD and 1.0 for HF. No mortality or relevant morbidity were observed. The number of hypotensive episodes was 1.78 ± 2.8 per patient and month during HD vs. 1.17 ± 3.1 during HF (p = 0.003) and the number of the hypertensive episodes 1.28 ± 2.8 during HD vs. 0.42 ± 0.8 during HF (p = 0.04). Incidences of arrhythmia, muscular cramps and headache were significantly less frequent during HF. Interdialytic cramps, arthralgia and fatigue were also significantly less frequent during the HF period. The average β2-microglobulin level was 27.1 ± 14.7 mg/dl at the start of the study, 22.9 ± 4.9 mg/dl at the beginning of phase II and 22.4 ± 4 mg/dl at the end of phase II (p = 0.01 compared to the start). A significant linear correlation between the normalized protein catabolic rate and eqKt/V was obtained faster during HD than during HF (45 vs. 120 days) indicating that HF affects the nutritional status with mechanisms different from HD. The present study is in agreement with the hypothesis that HF gives an adequate nutritional status with improved clinical stability and well being at a lower Kt/V compared to HD. Both therapies were efficient in controlling the pretreatment β2-microglobulin level.
The syndrome of apparent mineralocorticoid syndrome (AME) results from defective 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase 2 (11beta-HSD2). This enzyme is co-expressed with the mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) in the kidney and converts cortisol to its inactive metabolite cortisone. Its deficiency allows the unmetabolized cortisol to bind to the MR inducing sodium retention, suppression of PRA and hypertension. Thus, the syndrome is a disorder of the kidney. We present here the first patient affected by AME cured by kidney transplantation. Formerly, she was considered to have a mild form of the syndrome (Type II), but progressively she developed renal failure which required dialysis and subsequent kidney transplantation. To test the ability of the transplanted kidney to normalise the patient's cortisol metabolism, we gave, in two different experiments, 25 and 50 mg/day of cortisone acetate or 15 and 30 mg/day of cortisol after inhibition of the endogenous cortisol by synthetic glucocorticoid (methylprednisolone and dexamethasone). The AME diagnostic urinary steroid ratios tetrahydrocortisol+5alphatetrahydrocortisol/tetrahydrocortisone and cortisol/cortisone were measured by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. Transplantation resulted in lowering blood pressure and in normalization of serum K and PRA. After administration of a physiological dose of cortisol (15 mg/day), the urinary free cortisol/cortisone ratio was corrected (in contrast to the A-ring reduced metabolites ratio), confirming that the new kidney had functional 11beta-HSD2. This ratio was abnormally high when the supra-physiological dose of cortisol 30 mg/day was given. After cortisone administration, the tetrahydrocortisol+5alphatetrahydrocortisol/tetrahydrocortisone ratio resulted normalised with both physiological and supra-physiological doses, confirming that the hepatic reductase activity is not affected. As expected, the urinary free cortisol/cortisone ratio was normal with physiological, but increased after supra-physiological doses of cortisone. The described case indicates a normalisation of cortisol metabolism after kidney transplantation in AME patient and confirms the supposed pathophysiology of the syndrome. Moreover, it suggests a new therapeutic strategy in particularly vulnerable cohorts of patients inadequately responsive to drug therapy or with kidney failure.
Mineralocorticoid receptors possess the same affinity for aldosterone and for cortisol and preferential binding of aldosterone is modulated by the 11 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (11 beta-OHSD) enzyme, which converts cortisol to its inactive metabolite cortisone. Several endogenous or exogenous compounds able to inhibit the enzyme have been described and, as a consequence, produce the syndrome of apparent mineralocorticoid excess (AME) characterized by hypertension, hypokalemia, volume repletion and suppression of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system. High doses of furosemide, a diuretic that works in the luminal surface of the thick ascending limb of Henle's loop, have been reported to inhibit 11 beta-OHSD activity to the same extent as licorice in vivo and in vitro, in rat. The aim of our study was to verify the effect of the drug on 11 beta-OHSD activity in man at the doses currently used in clinical practice. We tested the activity of 11 beta-OHSD following both acute and protracted administration of furosemide. In the acute study, the drug was administered at low (40 mg i.v. in bolo) and high doses (infusion of 10 mg/kg bw i.v for six hours); the protracted furosemide administration consisted in 50 mg/day for 20 days, by mouth. The ratios between the cortisol metabolites tetrahydrocortisol plus allo-tetrahydrocortisol to tetra-hydrocortisone and urinary free cortisol to urinary free cortisone were used to measure the activity of 11 beta-OHSD. Urinary cortisol, cortisone and their metabolites were tested by a gas-chromatographic/mass spectrometric method. Neither acute nor prolonged administration of furosemide did affect the activity of 11 beta-OHSD although the drug was able to modify plasma aldosterone and PRA secretion and to determine hypokalemia. Our results suggest that furosemide does not play a significant role in 11 beta-OHSD modulation in humans, at least at the dosage used in clinical practice.
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