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Title: | Oxidative status and prevalent cardiovascular disease in patients with chronic renal failure treated by hemodialysis |
Authors: | Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi/Biyokimya Anabilim Dalı. 0000-0002-2593-7196 0000-0002-0909-618X Dirican, Melahat Sarandöl, Emre Serdar, Zehra Ocak, Nihal Dilek, Kamil AAH-6200-2021 ABE-1716-2020 6601919847 55943324800 57222002284 23989248600 56005080200 |
Keywords: | Cardiovascular disease Low-density-lipoprotein Hemodialysis Malondialdehyde Oxidative status Paraoxonase activity Serum paraoxonase activity Uremic patients Plasma Malondialdehyde Stress Susceptibility Inflammation Dialysis Risk Urology & nephrology |
Issue Date: | Sep-2007 |
Publisher: | Dustri Verlag |
Citation: | Dirican, M. vd. (2007). "Oxidative status and prevalent cardiovascular disease in patients with chronic renal failure treated by hemodialysis". Clinical Nephrology, 68(3), 144-150. |
Abstract: | Background: Hemodialysis (1413) patients are exposed to oxidative stress which contributes to cardiovascular disease (CVD). The purpose of this study was to investigate the oxidative and antioxidative status in HD patients with (CVD+, n = 38) and without (CVD-, n = 67) prevalent CVD. Patients and methods: A total of 105 HD patients and 21 healthy controls were assessed for lipid peroxidation indices (plasma malondialdehyde (MDA)), oxidizability of apolipoprotein B-containing lipoproteins (apo B-AMDA) and red blood cells (RBC-MDA) together with various components of the antioxidant system in plasma (paraoxonase/arylesterase activities, total carotenoids, vitamins C and E) and RBC (superoxide dismutase and glutathione peroxidase activities). Results: Plasma MDA and RBC-MDA were significantly higher, vitamin C and total carotenoid levels were significantly lower in both CVD+ and CVD- HD groups than in the control group. Plasma MDA levels were significantly higher and serum paraoxonase activity, uric acid and albumin levels were significantly lower in patients with CVD+ HD patients compared to those of the CVD- patients. Conclusion: This study suggests that the elevated level of plasma MDA and the lower activity of paraoxonase could contribute to the increased incidence of cardiovascular disease in hemodialysis patients. |
URI: | https://doi.org/10.5414/cnp68144 https://www.dustri.com/article_response_page.html?artId=1003&doi=10.5414/CNP68144&L=0 http://hdl.handle.net/11452/31700 |
ISSN: | 0301-0430 |
Appears in Collections: | PubMed Scopus Web of Science |
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