Association between hippuric acid and left ventricular hypertrophy in maintenance hemodialysis patients

作者:Yu Teng Hung; Tang Wei Hua; Lu Yung Chuan; Wang Chao Ping; Hung Wei Chin; Wu Cheng Ching; Tsai I Ting; Chung Fu Mei; Houng Jer Yiing; Lan Wen Chun; Lee Yau Jiunn*
来源:Clinica Chimica Acta, 2018, 484: 47-51.
DOI:10.1016/j.cca.2018.05.022

摘要

Background: Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) is one of the most common cardiac abnormalities in patients with end-stage renal disease. Hippuric acid (HA), a harmful uremic toxin, is known to be elevated in patients with uremia, and serum HA levels are associated with neurological symptoms, metabolic acidosis, and accelerated renal damage associated with chronic kidney disease. However, the pathophysiological role of HA in patients with uremia remains unclear. We investigated the association between serum HA levels and echo cardiographic measurements in patients undergoing hemodialysis (HD) treatment.
Methods: Eighty consecutive patients treated at a single HD center (44 males, 36 females; mean age 66 y, mean HD duration 6 y) were included in this study. Comprehensive echocardiography was performed after HD. Blood samples were obtained before HD.
Results: Pearson's correlation analysis revealed that serum HA levels were positively correlated with diastolic blood pressure, serum creatinine, left ventricular mass index, end diastolic interventricular septal thickness, left ventricular end-diastolic diameter, left ventricular end systolic diameter, end systolic left ventricular posterior wall thickness, and left atrium diameter, and negatively correlated with age. Furthermore, the HD patients with LVH had higher median serum HA levels than those without LVH (34.2 vs. 18.1 mu g/ml, p = 0.003). Multiple logistic regression analysis revealed that HA was independently associated with LVH even after adjusting for known biomarkers. Moreover, the receiver operator characteristics curve of HA showed that a HA level of > 26.9 mu g/ml was associated with LVH.
Conclusions: HA was significantly associated with LVH. HA could be a novel biomarker of left ventricular overload, which is closely associated with an increased risk of death in HD patients.

  • 出版日期2018-9