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Received on March 30, 2007
Accepted on September 18, 2007
Evidence-Based Laboratory Medicine and Test Utilization |
1 Division of Nephrology, University Hospital, University of Padova, Italy
2 Division of Laboratory Medicine, University Hospital, University of Padova, Italy
3 Division of Cardiology, University Hospital, University of Padova, Italy
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: apiccoli{at}unipd.it.
Background: The diagnostic value of natriuretic peptides in uremic cardiomyopathy has not been defined, nor has the effect of a hemodialysis (HD) session on peptides.
Methods: We performed an observational study of 100 white adult outpatients in New York Heart Association class I–II, with neither diabetes nor ischemic heart disease, 50 of whom had idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and 50 of whom had uremic cardiomyopathy and were undergoing HD. We measured plasma N-terminal proB-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP), BNP, and atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) both before and after a dialysis session. Doppler echocardiograms were evaluated. We performed multiple regression analysis on the logarithm of peptide concentrations using clinical, laboratory, and echocardio-Doppler data as explanatory variables.
Results: Mean peptide concentrations were higher in the HD group, with a HD:DCM ratio of 25 for NT-proBNP and 5 for BNP and ANP. Peptides were correlated with each other (r > 0.85). After HD, NT-proBNP significantly increased by 14%, BNP decreased by 17%, and ANP decreased by 56%. Predialysis concentrations correlated with postdialysis values (r > 0.85). A multiple regression equation significantly fitted the observed peptide concentrations, both pre- and postdialysis, using the same set of 4 variables: disease group (DCM or HD), diastolic pattern, left atrial volume, and body mass index.
Conclusions: Renal dysfunction was a confounder for natriuretic peptides, which were present in higher concentrations in the uremic patients with milder cardiac dysfunction than in those with idiopathic DCM without renal dysfunction. Left diastolic function pattern and atrial volume were cardiac determinants of peptide concentrations in DCM and HD.
The following articles in journals at HighWire Press have cited this article:
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S. C. Palmer, T. G. Yandle, M. G. Nicholls, C. M. Frampton, and A. M. Richards Regional clearance of amino-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide from human plasma Eur J Heart Fail, September 1, 2009; 11(9): 832 - 839. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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B.C. Astor, S. Yi, L. Hiremath, T. Corbin, V. Pogue, B. Wilkening, G. Peterson, J. Lewis, J.P. Lash, F. Van Lente, et al. N-Terminal Prohormone Brain Natriuretic Peptide as a Predictor of Cardiovascular Disease and Mortality in Blacks With Hypertensive Kidney Disease: The African American Study of Kidney Disease and Hypertension (AASK) Circulation, April 1, 2008; 117(13): 1685 - 1692. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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