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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Carbamylation of Serum Albumin as a Risk Factor for Mortality in Patients with Kidney Failure

TLDR
Serum %C-Alb is identified as a risk factor for mortality in patients with ESRD and it is proposed that this risk factor may be modifiable with supplemental amino acid therapy.
Abstract
Urea, the toxic end product of protein catabolism, is elevated in end-stage renal disease (ESRD), although it is unclear whether or how it contributes to disease. Urea can promote the carbamylation of proteins on multiple lysine side chains, including human albumin, which has a predominant carbamylation site on Lys(549). The proportion of serum albumin carbamylated on Lys(549) (%C-Alb) correlated with time-averaged blood urea concentrations and was twice as high in ESRD patients than in non-uremic subjects (0.90% versus 0.42%). Baseline %C-Alb was higher in ESRD subjects who died within 1 year than in those who survived longer than 1 year (1.01% versus 0.77%) and was associated with an increased risk of death within 1 year (hazard ratio, 3.76). These findings were validated in an independent cohort of diabetic ESRD subjects (hazard ratio, 3.73). Decreased concentrations of serum amino acids correlated with higher %C-Alb in ESRD patients, and mice with diet-induced amino acid deficiencies exhibited greater susceptibility to albumin carbamylation than did chow-fed mice. In vitro studies showed that amino acids such as cysteine, histidine, arginine, and lysine, as well as other nucleophiles such as taurine, inhibited cyanate-induced C-Alb formation at physiologic pH and temperature. Together, these results suggest that chronically elevated urea promotes carbamylation of proteins in ESRD and that serum amino acid concentrations may modulate this protein modification. In summary, we have identified serum %C-Alb as a risk factor for mortality in patients with ESRD and propose that this risk factor may be modifiable with supplemental amino acid therapy.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Atorvastatin in Patients With Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus Undergoing Hemodialysis

TL;DR: Atorvastatin had no statistically significant effect on the composite primary end point of cardiovascular death, nonfatal myocardial infarction, and stroke in patients with diabetes receiving hemodialysis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nutritional Management of Chronic Kidney Disease

TL;DR: The nutritional status of patients with chronic kidney disease is generally compromised and requires dietary adjustments, and several aspects of the nutritional management of chronic kidneys disease in adults are considered.
Journal ArticleDOI

Urea and Ammonia Metabolism and the Control of Renal Nitrogen Excretion

TL;DR: This review covers aspects of protein metabolism and the control of the two major molecules involved in renal nitrogen excretion: urea and ammonia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biochemical and Clinical Impact of Organic Uremic Retention Solutes: A Comprehensive Update

TL;DR: The inflammatory, cardio-vascular and fibrogenic systems were those most frequently affected and they are one by one major actors in the high morbidity and mortality of CKD but also the mechanisms that have most frequently been studied.
References
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Book

Fundamentals of Biostatistics

TL;DR: Bernard Rosner's "Fundamentals of BIOSTATISTICS" as mentioned in this paper is a practical introduction to the methods, techniques, and computation of statistics with human subjects.
Book

Survival Analysis: Techniques for Censored and Truncated Data

TL;DR: Survival analysis:techniques for censored and truncated data, Survival analysis: techniques for censored data analysis, survival analysis, and survival analysis techniques for truncated and uncoded data analysis.

Survival Analysis: Techniques for Censored and Truncated Data by

TL;DR: Survival analysis:techniques for censored and truncated data, Survival analysis:Techniques for censorship and truncation data, کتابخانه مرکزی ایران.
Journal ArticleDOI

Atorvastatin in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus undergoing hemodialysis.

TL;DR: A multicenter, randomized, double-blind, prospective study of 1255 subjects with type 2 diabetes mellitus receiving maintenance hemodialysis who were randomly assigned to receive 20 mg of atorvastatin per day or matching placebo found the median level of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol was reduced.
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