Our data suggests that leptin is markedly increased in some patients with chronic renal failure. The association of increased leptin with low protein intake and loss of lean tissue is consistent with leptin contributing to malnutrition but a definitive role cannot be substantiated by this study.
Six plasma proteins, two anthropometric measurements, hemoglobin and total lymphocytes were determined in 54 surgical patients and 19 normal individuals. Preoperative patients had a low mean values for prealbumin, retinol binding protein, and arm muscle circumference. In postoperative patients, plasma transferrin, albumin, hemoglobin, total lymphocytes and body weight were also low and complement C3 was higher than normal. A correlation matrix for 10 variables showed interrelationships between the biochemical and anthropometric data. Prealbumin and transferrin were highly correlated with most of the variables. The effects of protein-calorie malnutrition were analyzed from the data ranked and grouped according to the plasma prealbumin or transferrin concentration. Those groups with low mean values for these proteins also had low values for most of the other variables. Protein calorie malnutrition in surgical patients may be conveniently assessed from plasma prealbumin, transferrin, arm muscle circumference, percentage weight loss, and hemoglobin.
Eight patients with end-stage renal failure (plasma albumin less than 35 g/l) who were established on glucose CAPD exchanges, were studied for 4-week periods before, and after 12 weeks when 1% amino-acid solution had been used for the morning exchange. Anthropometric, biochemical, clinical and dietary assessments were made every 4 weeks. Dietary intakes of protein and calories were maintained. Studies with amino-acid solutions showed a mean of 13% and 8% amino acids remaining in the dialysate after 6 and 8 h respectively. Plasma amino acids increased to a maximum after 2 h of dialysis; however, fasting concentrations were constant over the 5 months. Osmolality of amino acids decreased comparably with 1.36% glucose during 8-h exchanges although the recovery of fluid was marginally less. Plasma transferrin increased significantly after 8 weeks of amino acids but subsequently decreased in one patient due to infection. No significant changes occurred in albumin, apolipoprotein A, IgG, IgA or prealbumin. Cholesterol and apolipoprotein B decreased in seven patients but increased in one due to rising calorie intake. Increases in urea and decreases in bicarbonate were not clinically significant. Amino-acid-based fluid was well tolerated with modest nutritional benefit and reduction in hyperlipidaemia. Optimal effects of amino acids are likely at higher concentrations using two or more exchanges in patients eating less than 0.9 g protein/kg per day.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.