Serum advanced glycosylation end-products in patients on hemodialysis and CAPD

Autor: A, Ateshkadi, C A, Johnson, H W, Founds, S W, Zimmerman
Rok vydání: 1995
Předmět:
Zdroj: Peritoneal dialysis international : journal of the International Society for Peritoneal Dialysis. 15(2)
ISSN: 0896-8608
Popis: Part I: To evaluate the long-term effects of daily glucose absorption from the peritoneal dialysis fluid on the formation of low-molecular-weight advanced glycosylation end-products (AGE-peptides) in nondiabetic continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) patients. Part II: To determine the acute effect of CAPD on serum AGE-peptide concentrations.Part I: Noninterventional, parallel, cross-sectional clinical trial. Part II: Crossover clinical trial.A university-based hospital, and clinics.Part I: Sixty nondiabetic subjects recruited into three age-matched (+/- 5 years) groups, as follows: 20 healthy volunteers (controls); 20 hemodialysis patients; and 20 CAPD patients. Part II: Eight patients with diabetes mellitus (type I or II) and chronic renal failure who were about to undergo CAPD.Part I: None. Part II: Uninterrupted CAPD, as medically required.Part I: To determine serum AGE-peptide concentrations blood samples were obtained randomly from controls and CAPD patients, and predialysis from hemodialysis patients. Hemoglobin A1c was also measured in all subjects. Part II: To determine serum AGE-peptide concentrations, blood samples were collected within one month prior to initiation of CAPD (predialysis) and, again, one week after initiation of uninterrupted CAPD (postdialysis). Hemoglobin A1c was measured predialysis.Part I: Mean hemoglobin A1c values for all groups were within the normal range; however, the mean value for CAPD patients was significantly higher than for both hemodialysis patients and healthy controls (controls, 5.21% +/- 0.6%; hemodialysis, 5.12% +/- 0.5%; CAPD, 5.78% +/- 0.6%; p0.01). The dialysis patients had a significantly higher mean serum AGE-peptide concentration than the control subjects (controls, 7.02 +/- 3.4 units/mL; hemodialysis, 11.9 +/- 3.6 units/mL; CAPD, 11.1 +/- 4.5 units/mL; p0.01). There was no difference in the mean serum AGE-peptide concentration of patients in the hemodialysis and CAPD groups. Part II: The mean hemoglobin A1c value in the diabetic predialysis patients was 9.2% +/- 1.9%. There was no difference between the predialysis and postdialysis serum AGE-peptide concentrations (predialysis, 16.9 +/- 9.6 units/mL; postdialysis, 16.0 +/- 2.9 units/mL; p = 0.78).Despite the increased glucose load and the higher hemoglobin A1c values, indicating poor glycemic control, nondiabetic CAPD patients did not have higher serum AGE-peptide concentrations than the nondiabetic hemodialysis patients. In diabetic patients, CAPD did not further increase the serum concentrations of AGE-peptides.
Databáze: OpenAIRE