AI Article Synopsis

  • - Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a major global health issue, especially due to its links with cardiovascular disease (CVD) and dyslipidemia, which makes studying lipid metabolism in CKD patients crucial.
  • - A one-year study involving 150 patients with various stages of CKD found that while average cholesterol levels remained mostly stable, triglyceride levels increased consistently as CKD progressed, peaking at stage IV.
  • - The research highlighted that patients at early CKD stages had lower triglyceride levels (1.73±1.17 mmol/L) compared to the higher levels observed in stage III (2.13±1.11 mmol/L), indicating a significant rise in triglycerides as kidney function declines.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Chronic kidney disease (CKD) represents a serious public health problem due to the increase in incidence and prevalence of this disease worldwide. Given the significant morbidity and mortality from cardiovascular disease (CVD) in the population of patients with CKD, and the fact that dyslipidemia itself is a risk factor for CVD, increases the importance of lipid metabolism study in patients with CKD.

Goal: Evaluate the lipid status of patients with chronic kidney disease.

Material And Methods: A one-year prospective study included 150 adult patients who were in various stages of chronic renal failure (stage I to IV). Estimate of creatinine clearance was performed using Cockroft-Goult formula. The classification of patients according to stages of chronic renal insufficiency was performed in accordance with the criteria of Kidney Disease Outcomes Quality Initiative (K/DOQI).

Results: Of the total number of patients (N=150) there was 71 males and 79 females. The mean age of patients was 55.43 years. Average values of serum cholesterol were highest in patients with stage II renal disease and the lowest in patients classified as stage IV (5.76±1.60 mmol/L vs. 5.07±1.88 mmol/L). Analysis of the average value of triglycerides in blood show a slight increase through the stages of CKD in a manner that patients classified into stage I have low serum triglyceride levels (1.73±1.17 mmol/L (range 0.61 to 5.5 mmol/L), and patients classified in stage III the highest value 2.13±1.11 mmol/L (range 0.62 to 4.66 mmol/L).

Conclusion: Average cholesterol levels does not statistically significantly change with progression of chronic renal disease. There is an almost linear increase in average triglyceride levels in chronic renal disease. Triglyceride levels in serum begins to increase in the early stage of chronic renal disease and reach the peak in stage IV.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5010092PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.5455/medarh.2016.70.191-192DOI Listing

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