Homocysteine-lowering therapy in renal disease


Autoria(s): Austen, S. K.; Coombes, J. S.; Fassett, R. G.
Contribuinte(s)

K. M. Koch

Data(s)

01/12/2003

Resumo

Hyperhomocysteinemia is a potential risk factor for vascular disease and is associated with endothelial dysfunction, a predictor of adverse cardiovascular events. Renal patients (end-stage renal failure (ESRF) and transplant recipients (RTR)) exhibit both hyperhomocysteinemia and endothelial dysfunction with increasing evidence of a causative link between the 2 conditions. The elevated homocysteine appears to be due to altered metabolism in the kidney (intrarenal) and in the uremic circulation ( extrarenal). This review will discuss 18 supplementation studies conducted in ESRF and 6 in RTR investigating the effects of nutritional therapy to lower homocysteine. The clinical significance of lowering homocysteine in renal patients will be discussed with data on the effects of B vitamin supplementation on cardiovascular outcomes such as endothelial function presented. Folic acid is the most effective nutritional therapy to lower homocysteine. In ESRF patients, supplementation with folic acid over a wide dose range ( 2 - 20 mg/day) either individually or in combination with other B vitamins will decrease but not normalize homocysteine. In contrast, in RTR similar doses of folic acid normalizes homocysteine. Folic acid improves endothelial function in ESRF patients, however this has yet to be investigated in RTR. Homocysteine-lowering therapy is more effective in ESRF patients than RTR.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:67133

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Dustri-Verlag Dr Karl Feistle

Palavras-Chave #Homocysteine #Folic Acid #Vitamin B-6 #Vitamin B-12 #Betaine #Reduced Folates #Endothelial Function #Renal Disease #Folic-acid Supplementation #Elevated Plasma Homocysteine #Improve Endothelial Function #Serum Total Homocysteine #Coronary-artery Disease #Transplant Recipients #Hemodialysis-patients #Risk-factor #Cardiovascular-disease #Dialysis Patients #Urology & Nephrology #C1 #321012 Nephrology and Urology #730115 Urogenital system and disorders
Tipo

Journal Article