Metabolic syndrome has been reported to be associated with chronic kidney disease, but the mechanisms remain unclear. Although feeding of a high-fat diet (HFD) to C57BL/6 mice is reported to induce systemic metabolic abnormalities and subsequent renal injuries, such as albuminuria, similar to human metabolic syndrome, alterations in HFD-induced renal injuries have not been fully elucidated in detail. We therefore investigated the structural and functional changes in the kidneys of C57BL/6 mice on a HFD. Six-week-old mice were fed a low-fat diet (LFD; 10% of total calories from fat) or a HFD (60% fat) for 12 wk. Mice fed a HFD showed significant increases in body weight, systolic blood pressure, plasma insulin, glucose, and triglycerides compared with those on a LFD. Accompanying these systemic changes, mice on a HFD showed albuminuria, an increase in glomerular tuft area, and mesangial expansion. These systemic and renal alterations in mice on a HFD were prevented by body weight control with the dietary restriction of feeding a HFD. Furthermore, mice on a HFD showed renal pathophysiological alterations including renal lipid accumulation, an increased accumulation of type IV collagen in glomeruli, an increase in macrophage infiltration in the renal medulla, an increase in urinary 8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine excretion, and impaired sodium handling. In conclusion, this study suggests that local metabolic alterations in the kidney play important roles in the development of renal injury associated with metabolic syndrome in addition to systemic metabolic changes and an increase in body weight.
Abstract:In hemodialysis (HD) patients the glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) level may underestimate glycemic control. The aim of this study is to estimate accurate glycemic control in type 2 diabetic patients on HD. Type 2 diabetes patients (N = 87) who had been receiving maintenance HD for at least one year were enrolled. HbA1c and the percentage of glycated albumin relative to total the serum albumin (%GA) were measured in blood samples and the factors that affected the %GA/HbA1c ratio were examined. There were significant and positive correlations between the plasma glucose and either the HbA1c levels (r = 0.539, P < 0.01) or the %GA level (r = 0.520, P < 0.01). No relationship between the serum albumin levels and %GA levels was observed. A weekly dose of erythropoietin (EPO) was positively correlated with the ratio of %GA/HbA1c and hematocrit (Ht) correlated negatively. There was no significant correlation between the %GA/ HbA1c level and the EPO dose in patients with Ht Ն 30%, although a significant correlation was found between those parameters in the Ht < 30% group. The mean of the %GA/ HbA1c ratios in patients with Ht Ն 30%, with Ht < 30% and treated with EPO < 100 IU/kg/week, and with Ht < 30% and treated with EPO Ն 100 IU/kg/week were 3.41, 3.56 and 4.13, respectively. In HD patients, accurate glycemic control may be estimated as: HbA1c ¥ 1.14 if Ht Ն 30%; HbA1c ¥ 1.19 if Ht < 30% and treated with low dosages of EPO; and HbA1c ¥ 1.38 if Ht < 30% and treated with high dosages of EPO.
We present a case of a 38-year-old Japanese man with Wegener's granulomatosis complicated with pulmonary-renal syndrome, i.e., diffuse pulmonary hemorrhage and rapidly progressive renal glomerulonephritis. As this is a life-threatening condition, we promptly initiated plasma exchange with intravenous methylprednisolone therapy. Diffuse pulmonary hemorrhage and renal failure were markedly improved. This case merits presentation because there are few clinical studies of the treatment of Wegener's granulomatosis with pulmonary-renal syndrome, particularly with pulmonary hemorrhage.
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