Hyponatremia with Persistent Elevated Urinary Fractional Uric Acid Excretion: Evidence for Proximal Tubular Injury?

Background/Aims: Hyponatremia associated with high urinary fractional excretion of uric acid which persists after serum sodium is corrected is the cardinal feature of salt losing nephropathy (SLN). We hypothesize that low grade proximal tubular injury is present in SLN because the proximal tubule is...

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Main Authors: S.-M.Kurt Lee, Miguel A. Lanaspa, Laura G. Sánchez-Lozada, Richard J. Johnson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Karger Publishers 2016-08-01
Series:Kidney & Blood Pressure Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.karger.com/Article/FullText/447928
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spelling doaj-722aa122560e4fc8826c9bd7bea945b82020-11-25T03:17:54ZengKarger PublishersKidney & Blood Pressure Research1420-40961423-01432016-08-0141553554410.1159/000447928447928Hyponatremia with Persistent Elevated Urinary Fractional Uric Acid Excretion: Evidence for Proximal Tubular Injury?S.-M.Kurt LeeMiguel A. LanaspaLaura G. Sánchez-LozadaRichard J. JohnsonBackground/Aims: Hyponatremia associated with high urinary fractional excretion of uric acid which persists after serum sodium is corrected is the cardinal feature of salt losing nephropathy (SLN). We hypothesize that low grade proximal tubular injury is present in SLN because the proximal tubule is the main site of uric acid and sodium transport. Methods: Five subjects with SLN were compared to four subjects with recurrent hyponatremia and three healthy individuals. Urinary NGAL (neutrophil gelatinase associated lipocalin, a marker of tubular injury) and fasting urinary fructose levels (a marker of proximal tubular injury) were measured. Results: Subjects with SLN (n=5) showed elevated fractional uric acid excretion (22 ± 6 vs 4 ± 2 percent, pConclusion: High urinary fractional excretion of uric acid in SLN is associated with elevated NGAL and fasting urinary fructose levels suggesting that SLN may involve tubular injury.http://www.karger.com/Article/FullText/447928HyponatremiaUric acidProximal tubuleFructoseSalt losing nephropathy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author S.-M.Kurt Lee
Miguel A. Lanaspa
Laura G. Sánchez-Lozada
Richard J. Johnson
spellingShingle S.-M.Kurt Lee
Miguel A. Lanaspa
Laura G. Sánchez-Lozada
Richard J. Johnson
Hyponatremia with Persistent Elevated Urinary Fractional Uric Acid Excretion: Evidence for Proximal Tubular Injury?
Kidney & Blood Pressure Research
Hyponatremia
Uric acid
Proximal tubule
Fructose
Salt losing nephropathy
author_facet S.-M.Kurt Lee
Miguel A. Lanaspa
Laura G. Sánchez-Lozada
Richard J. Johnson
author_sort S.-M.Kurt Lee
title Hyponatremia with Persistent Elevated Urinary Fractional Uric Acid Excretion: Evidence for Proximal Tubular Injury?
title_short Hyponatremia with Persistent Elevated Urinary Fractional Uric Acid Excretion: Evidence for Proximal Tubular Injury?
title_full Hyponatremia with Persistent Elevated Urinary Fractional Uric Acid Excretion: Evidence for Proximal Tubular Injury?
title_fullStr Hyponatremia with Persistent Elevated Urinary Fractional Uric Acid Excretion: Evidence for Proximal Tubular Injury?
title_full_unstemmed Hyponatremia with Persistent Elevated Urinary Fractional Uric Acid Excretion: Evidence for Proximal Tubular Injury?
title_sort hyponatremia with persistent elevated urinary fractional uric acid excretion: evidence for proximal tubular injury?
publisher Karger Publishers
series Kidney & Blood Pressure Research
issn 1420-4096
1423-0143
publishDate 2016-08-01
description Background/Aims: Hyponatremia associated with high urinary fractional excretion of uric acid which persists after serum sodium is corrected is the cardinal feature of salt losing nephropathy (SLN). We hypothesize that low grade proximal tubular injury is present in SLN because the proximal tubule is the main site of uric acid and sodium transport. Methods: Five subjects with SLN were compared to four subjects with recurrent hyponatremia and three healthy individuals. Urinary NGAL (neutrophil gelatinase associated lipocalin, a marker of tubular injury) and fasting urinary fructose levels (a marker of proximal tubular injury) were measured. Results: Subjects with SLN (n=5) showed elevated fractional uric acid excretion (22 ± 6 vs 4 ± 2 percent, pConclusion: High urinary fractional excretion of uric acid in SLN is associated with elevated NGAL and fasting urinary fructose levels suggesting that SLN may involve tubular injury.
topic Hyponatremia
Uric acid
Proximal tubule
Fructose
Salt losing nephropathy
url http://www.karger.com/Article/FullText/447928
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