[HTML][HTML] Uremic toxin clearance and cardiovascular toxicities

RD Mair, TL Sirich, TW Meyer - Toxins, 2018 - mdpi.com
RD Mair, TL Sirich, TW Meyer
Toxins, 2018mdpi.com
Uremic solutes contribute to cardiovascular disease in renal insufficiency. In this review we
describe the clearance of selected uremic solutes, which have been associated with
cardiovascular disease. These solutes—indoxyl sulfate (IS), p-cresol sulfate (PCS),
phenylacetylglutamine (PAG), trimethylamine-n-oxide (TMAO), and kynurenine—exemplify
different mechanisms of clearance. IS and PCS are protein-bound solutes efficiently cleared
by the native kidney through tubular secretion. PAG and TMAO are not protein-bound but …
Uremic solutes contribute to cardiovascular disease in renal insufficiency. In this review we describe the clearance of selected uremic solutes, which have been associated with cardiovascular disease. These solutes—indoxyl sulfate (IS), p-cresol sulfate (PCS), phenylacetylglutamine (PAG), trimethylamine-n-oxide (TMAO), and kynurenine—exemplify different mechanisms of clearance. IS and PCS are protein-bound solutes efficiently cleared by the native kidney through tubular secretion. PAG and TMAO are not protein-bound but are also cleared by the native kidney through tubular secretion, while kynurenine is not normally cleared by the kidney. Increases in the plasma levels of the normally secreted solutes IS, PCS, TMAO, and PAG in chronic kidney disease (CKD) are attributable to a reduction in their renal clearances. Levels of each of these potential toxins are even higher in patients on dialysis than in those with advanced chronic kidney disease, which can be accounted for in part by a low ratio of dialytic to native kidney clearance. The rise in plasma kynurenine in CKD and dialysis patients, by contrast, remains to be explained. Our ability to detect lower levels of the potential uremic cardiovascular toxins with renal replacement therapy may be limited by the intermittency of treatment, by increases in solute production, and by the presence of non-renal clearance. Reduction in the levels of uremic cardiovascular toxins may in the future be achieved more effectively by inhibiting their production.
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