Data at 30 months from this study showed the synergic effect of CRP and pro-inflammatory cytokines as the strong predictors of all-cause and CV mortality. HDF was associated with an improved cumulative survival independent of the dialysis dose.
IL-6 has a stronger predictive value than CRP for cardiovascular mortality and provides independent prognostic information, while conveying most of that provided by CRP.
This study was planned to clarify the mechanism(s) by which hemodialysis increases the QTc dispersion, a marker of risk of ventricular arrhythmias. To this aim, 10 uremic patients, without any relevant heart diseases, underwent two different types of hemodialysis schedules. In the first, 1 h of isolated high rate ultrafiltration preceded the standard diffusive procedure. In the second, during the first hour of standard bicarbonate hemodialysis, the decrease of plasma potassium concentration was prevented by increasing K+ concentration in the dialysate, according to its pre dialysis plasma levels. During the high rate ultrafiltration period, together with ECG signs of increased sympathetic nervous system activity and catecholamines secretion, the QTc dispersion did not change significantly. Instead, an evident increment was observed 1 h after the start of the diffusive hemodialysis, then slowly progressing until the end of the dialysis and finally returning to the pre dialysis values within 2 h after the end of the session. To the contrary, the increase of the QTc dispersion was totally blunted during a standard hemodialysis procedure in absence of plasma K+ decrease, but appeared again when the K+ dialysate fluid concentration was restored to 2 mmol/l. This study provides evidence that the increase of QTc dispersion occurring on hemodialysis is mainly related to the diffusive process, more precisely to the K+ removal. This is one more reason to focus attention on K+ removal rate especially when hemodialysis treatment is given in uremics affected by cardiac diseases with high risk of arrhythmias.
Dietary supplementation with n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (n-3 PUFA) has been shown to reduce proteinuria in experimental models of renal diseases, but their potential role in the treatment of human renal disease is unknown. We administered n-3 PUFA in the form of triglycerides [with eicosapentaenoic (EPA)+docosahexaenoic (DHA) = 3 g/day into 4 patients] and of ethyl esters (EPA+DHA = 7.7 g/day) into 10 patients (one patient twice) with chronic glomerular disease (membranous glomerulonephritis and focal glomerular sclerosis), all diagnosed histologically. Serum albumin was > 2.4 g/dl and serum creatinine < 2.5 mg/dl in all patients. Treatment was given for periods of six weeks, followed by a prolonged follow-up for 27 weeks in 10 cases. Dietary supplementation with n-3 PUFA caused the expected reduction in platelet generation of thromboxane B2 (mean +/- SEM, from 490 +/- 70 ng/ml at baseline, to 342 +/- 147 ng/ml at 6 weeks, P < 0.05) of serum triglycerides (from 236 +/- 60 to 170 +/- 43, P < 0.01), and a prolongation of the bleeding time (from 5.8 +/- 0.4 min to 7.7 +/- 0.4 min, P < 0.01) in patients treated with ethyl esters. A modest but significant reduction in serum total cholesterol was noticed (from 275 +/- 27 to 252 +/- 24 mg/dl).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
In hemodialysis patients, C-reactive protein (CRP), an acute-phase reactant, is a sensitive and independent marker of malnutrition, anemia, and amyloidosis. The aim of the present studies was to evaluate CRP and interleukin 6 levels in plasma samples from long-term hemodialysis patients on different extracorporeal modalities associated with or without backfiltration. Two hundred and forty-seven patients were recruited in eight hospital-based centers. All patients had been on their dialytic modality for at least 6 months. At enrollment, 46 hemodialysis patients out of 247 (18.6%) had clinical evidence of pathologies known to be associated with high CRP values. The 201 remaining patients were defined as clinically stable and were on conventional hemodialysis (34%), hemodiafiltration with infusion volumes <10 liters/session (10%), hemodiafiltration with infusion volumes <20 liters/session (32%), and double-chamber hemodiafiltration with infusion volumes <10 liters/session (22%). Analysis of CRP values in the clinically stable patients showed that an unexpectedly high proportion (47%) of the patients had CRP values higher than 5 mg/l (taken as the upper limit in normal human subjects). The values of CRP and interleukin 6 were significantly higher in hemodiafiltration with infusion volumes <10 liters/session than in hemodiafiltration with infusion volumes >20 liters/session, in hemodialysis and in double-chamber hemodiafiltration. The same pattern occurred after 6 months of follow-up in 171 out of 201 clinically stable patients. Hemodialytic conditions that expose to the risk of backfiltration such as low exchange volume hemodiafiltration may induce a chronic inflammatory state as reflected by increased plasma values of both CRP and interleukin 6, thus suggesting the need for hemodialytic strategies that reduce (hemodialysis with low-permeability membranes or hemodiafiltration with infusion volumes >20 liters) or eliminate (double-chamber hemodiafiltration) backfiltration of bacteria-derived contaminants.
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