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Urinary Sodium Excretion Has Positive Correlation with Activation of Urinary Renin Angiotensin System and Reactive Oxygen Species in Hypertensive Chronic Kidney Disease

Cited 3 time in Web of Science Cited 4 time in Scopus
Authors

Ahn, Shin-Young; Kim, Sejoong; Kim, Dong Ki; Park, Jung Hwan; Shin, Sung Joon; Lee, Sang Ho; Choi, Bum Soon; Lim, Chun Soo; Kim, Suhnggwon; Chin, Ho Jun

Issue Date
2014-09
Publisher
대한의학회
Citation
Journal of Korean Medical Science, Vol.29, pp.S123-S130
Abstract
It is not well described the pathophysiology of renal injuries caused by a high salt intake in humans. The authors analyzed the relationship between the 24-hr urine sodium-to-creatinine ratio (24HUna/cr) and renal injury parameters such as urine angiotensinogen (uAGT/cr), monocyte chemoattractant peptide-1 (uMCP1/cr), and malondialdehyde-to-creatinine ratio (uMDA/cr) by using the data derived from 226 hypertensive chronic kidney disease patients. At baseline, the 24HUna/cr group or levels had a positive correlation with uAGT/cr and uMDA/cr adjusted for related factors (P < 0.001 for each analysis). When we estimated uAGT/cr in the 24HUna/cr groups by ANCOVA, the uAGT/cr in patients with >= 200 mEq/g cr was higher than in patients with < 100 mEq/g cr (708 [95% CI, 448-967] vs. 334 [95% CI, 184-483] pg/mg cr, P = 0.014). Similarly, uMDA/cr was estimated as 0.17 (95% CI, 0.14-0.21) pM/mg cr in patients with < 100 mEq/g cr and 0.27 (95% CI, 0.20-0.33) pM/mg cr in patients with >= 200 mEq/g cr (P = 0.016). During the 16-week follow-up period, an increase in urinary sodium excretion predicted an increase in urinary angiotensinogen excretion. In conclusion, high salt intake increases renal reninangiotensin- system (RAS) activation, primarily, and directly or indirectly affects the production of reactive oxygen species through renal RAS activation.
ISSN
1011-8934
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/207360
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3346/jkms.2014.29.S2.S123
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  • College of Medicine
  • Department of Medicine
Research Area Nephrology, Transplantation, Urology

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