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Uric Acid - key ingredient in the recipe for cardiorenal metabolic syndrome.

Kunal Chaudhary, +3 more
- 01 Oct 2013 - 
- Vol. 3, Iss: 3, pp 208-220
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TLDR
Animal and epidemiological studies support the notion that elevated serum uric acid levels play an important role in promoting insulin resistance and hypertension and suggest potential pathophysiological mechanisms that contribute to the development of the CRS and associated cardiovascular disease and chronic kidney disease.
Abstract
Elevated serum uric acid levels are a frequent finding in persons with obesity, hypertension, cardiovascular and kidney disease as well as in those with the cardiorenal metabolic syndrome (CRS). The increased consumption of a fructose-rich Western diet has contributed to the increasing incidence of the CRS, obesity and diabetes especially in industrialized populations. There is also increasing evidence that supports a causal role of high dietary fructose driving elevations in uric acid in association with the CRS. Animal and epidemiological studies support the notion that elevated serum uric acid levels play an important role in promoting insulin resistance and hypertension and suggest potential pathophysiological mechanisms that contribute to the development of the CRS and associated cardiovascular disease and chronic kidney disease. To this point, elevated serum levels of uric acid appear to contribute to impaired nitric oxide production/endothelial dysfunction, increased vascular stiffness, inappropriate activation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, enhanced oxidative stress, and maladaptive immune and inflammatory responses. These abnormalities, in turn, promote vascular, cardiac and renal fibrosis as well as associated functional abnormalities. Small clinical trials have suggested that uric acid-lowering therapies may be beneficial in such patients; however, a consensus on the treatment of asymptomatic hyperuricemia is lacking. Larger randomized controlled trials need to be performed in order to critically evaluate the beneficial effect of lowering serum uric acid in patients with the CRS and those with diabetes and/or hypertension.

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Regulation of uric acid metabolism and excretion

TL;DR: This review describes the enzymatic pathways involved in the degradation of purines, getting into their structure and biochemistry until the uric acid formation.
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The pathophysiology of hypertension in patients with obesity

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Physiological functions and pathogenic potential of uric acid: A review

TL;DR: Uric acid, C5H4N4O3, 7,9-dihydro-1H-purine-2,6,8(3H)-trione, molecular mass 168 Da, is a product of the metabolic breakdown of purine nucleotides (adenine and guanine).
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Uric acid and cardiovascular disease.

Gjin Ndrepepa
- 24 May 2018 - 
TL;DR: Experimental and clinical studies have evidenced several mechanisms through which elevated UA level exerts deleterious effects on cardiovascular health including increased oxidative stress, reduced availability of nitric oxide and endothelial dysfunction, promotion of local and systemic inflammation, vasoconstriction and proliferation of vascular smooth muscle cells, insulin resistance and metabolic dysregulation.
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Endothelial cell senescence in aging-related vascular dysfunction.

TL;DR: A contemporary update on molecular mechanisms, pathophysiological events, as well functional changes in EC senescence and age-associated cardiovascular disease is provided.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Role for Uric Acid in the Progression of Renal Disease

TL;DR: Hyperuricemia accelerates renal progression in the RK model via a mechanism linked to high systemic BP and COX-2-mediated, thromboxane-induced vascular disease and provides direct evidence that uric acid may be a true mediator of renal disease and progression.
Journal ArticleDOI

Potential role of sugar (fructose) in the epidemic of hypertension, obesity and the metabolic syndrome, diabetes, kidney disease, and cardiovascular disease

TL;DR: It is suggested that high intakes of fructose in African Americans may explain their greater predisposition to develop cardiorenal disease, and a list of testable predictions to evaluate this hypothesis is provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of Allopurinol on Blood Pressure of Adolescents With Newly Diagnosed Essential Hypertension: A Randomized Trial

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