ACS Pharmacol Transl Sci
November 2024
Tacrolimus (TAC) has a narrow therapeutic index and shows interindividual variabilities in its blood concentration. Although guidelines recommend a genetic variant (rs776746) to determine the optimized TAC dose, discrepancies in accuracy have been noted. Therefore, studying other variants of may improve the accuracy of the TAC dose.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe most common cause of death in the intensive care unit (ICU) is the development of multiorgan dysfunction syndrome (MODS). Besides life-supporting treatments, no cure exists, and its mechanisms are still poorly understood. Catalytic iron is associated with ICU mortality and is known to cause free radical-mediated cellular toxicity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe pathophysiology and the factors determining disease severity in COVID-19 are not yet clear, with current data indicating a possible role of altered iron metabolism. Previous studies of iron parameters in COVID-19 are cross-sectional and have not studied catalytic iron, the biologically most active form of iron. The study was done to determine the role of catalytic iron in the adverse outcomes in COVID-19.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNephrol Dial Transplant
September 2021
Background: The non-transferrin bound catalytic iron moiety catalyses production of toxic reactive oxygen species and is associated with adverse outcomes. We hypothesized that serum catalytic iron (SCI) is associated with progression of chronic kidney disease (CKD).
Methods: Baseline samples of the Indian Chronic Kidney Disease participants with at least one follow up visit were tested for total iron, iron binding capacity, transferrin saturation, SCI, ferritin and hepcidin.
Background: Iron is a key mediator of AKI in animal models, but data on circulating iron parameters in human AKI are limited.
Methods: We examined results from the ARF Trial Network study to assess the association of plasma catalytic iron, total iron, transferrin, ferritin, free hemoglobin, and hepcidin with 60-day mortality. Participants included critically ill patients with AKI requiring RRT who were enrolled in the study.
Context: Although the technical feasibility of laparoscopic donor nephrectomy (LDN) has been established, concerns have been raised about the impaired renal function resulting from pneumoperitoneum and its short- and long-term effects.
Aims: We used urinary biomarkers of acute kidney injury including urinary neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (uNGAL) and urinary N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase (uNAG) to study the injury caused to the donor's retained kidney by pneumoperitoneum.
Settings And Design: This was a prospective cohort study of thirty consecutive patients who underwent LDN at our hospital.
Background: Catalytic iron (CI) is unbound ferric iron with the potential to generate reactive oxygen species with further deleterious vascular effects. In acute coronary syndromes, high levels of CI are linked to all-cause mortality. The prognostic impact of CI and iron metabolism in cardiogenic shock (CS) is currently undetermined.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
August 2015
We investigate the evolution of hydromagnetic perturbations in a small section of accretion disks. It is known that molecular viscosity is negligible in accretion disks. Hence, it has been argued that a mechanism, known as magnetorotational instability (MRI), is responsible for transporting matter in the presence of a weak magnetic field.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCatalytic iron, the chemical form of iron capable of participating in redox cycling, is a key mediator of acute kidney injury (AKI) in multiple animal models, but its role in human AKI has not been studied. Here we tested in a prospective cohort of 250 patients undergoing cardiac surgery whether plasma catalytic iron levels are elevated and associated with the composite outcome of AKI requiring renal replacement therapy or in-hospital mortality. Plasma catalytic iron, free hemoglobin, and other iron parameters were measured preoperatively, at the end of cardiopulmonary bypass, and on postoperative days 1 and 3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin J Am Soc Nephrol
November 2014
Background And Objectives: Catalytic iron has been hypothesized to be a key mediator of AKI. However, the association between plasma catalytic iron levels and AKI has not been well studied in humans.
Design, Settings, Participants, & Measurements: A single-center, prospective, nonconsecutive cohort study of 121 critically ill patients admitted to intensive care units (ICUs) between 2008 and 2012 was performed.
Stellar mass black holes (SMBHs), forming by the core collapse of very massive, rapidly rotating stars, are expected to exhibit a high density accretion disk around them developed from the spinning mantle of the collapsing star. A wide class of such disks, due to their high density and temperature, are effective emitters of neutrinos and hence called neutrino cooled disks. Tracking the physics relating the observed (neutrino) luminosity to the mass, spin of black holes (BHs) and the accretion rate (M) of such disks, here we establish a correlation between the spin and mass of SMBHs at their formation stage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
July 2013
We investigate the evolution of magnetohydrodynamic (or hydromagnetic as coined by Chandrasekhar) perturbations in the presence of stochastic noise in rotating shear flows. The particular emphasis is the flows whose angular velocity decreases but specific angular momentum increases with increasing radial coordinate. Such flows, however, are Rayleigh stable but must be turbulent in order to explain astrophysical observed data and, hence, reveal a mismatch between the linear theory and observations and experiments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Catalytic iron (CI) mediates vascular injury by generating reactive oxygen species. We evaluated role of CI in predicting mortality in patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS) and studied association of contrast nephropathy with CI levels.
Methods: We investigated 806 patients with ACS undergoing contrast exposure for a cardiac procedure who were followed up for 30 days.
Type Ia supernovae, sparked off by exploding white dwarfs of mass close to the Chandrasekhar limit, play the key role in understanding the expansion rate of the Universe. However, recent observations of several peculiar type Ia supernovae argue for its progenitor mass to be significantly super-Chandrasekhar. We show that strongly magnetized white dwarfs not only can violate the Chandrasekhar mass limit significantly, but exhibit a different mass limit.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The potential of iron to generate reactive oxygen species has motivated a long-standing interest in whether excess iron is causally linked to atherosclerotic heart disease. Circulating catalytic iron ("free" iron) is that which is not bound to transferrin or ferritin and is available to generate reactive oxygen species that may have deleterious vascular effects.
Hypothesis: We hypothesized that increased levels of catalytic iron would be associated with increased cardiovascular events.
In the present paper, we consider a mathematical model of ecosystem population interaction where the population suffers from a susceptible-infectious-susceptible disease. Dispersal of both the susceptible and the infective is incorporated using reaction-diffusion equations. We first study the stability criteria of the basic (non-spatial) model around the disease-free and the infected steady states.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe ability of iron to cycle reversibly between its ferrous and ferric oxidation states is essential for the biological functions of iron but may contribute to vascular injury through the generation of powerful oxidant species. We examined the association between chemical forms of iron that can participate in redox cycling, often referred to as "catalytic" or "labile" iron, and cardiovascular disease (CVD). In our cross-sectional study of 496 participants, 85 had CVD.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Obesity precedes the development of many cardiovascular disease risk factors, including type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM), hypertension, and chronic kidney disease. Catalytic iron, which has been associated with these chronic diseases, may be one of the links between obesity and these multifactorial diverse disorders.
Objective: We investigated whether urinary catalytic iron is increased in obese individuals without DM and overt kidney disease.
Serum creatinine does not distinguish between various causes of graft dysfunction. Serial assay of proximal tubular enzymes N-Acetyl-D-glucosaminidase (NAG), Alanine aminopeptidase (AAP) and Gamma glutamyl transferase (GGT) in urine was done to assess their usefulness in distinguishing various causes of graft dysfunction. Daily serum creatinine and enzymuria were measured in 32 consecutive renal allograft recipients for first 15 postoperative days.
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