The correlation between renal functional reserve and serum uric acid and quality of life in chronic kidney disease stage I–III

Background. In clinical practice the renal functional reserve can be an important tool to identify the early kidney functional damage, cure them and impact diseases prognosis. The aim of this article was to review the concept of renal functional reserve in its relation with serum uric acid level and...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: L.M. Savytska
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Publishing House Zaslavsky 2017-04-01
Series:Počki
Subjects:
Online Access:http://kidneys.zaslavsky.com.ua/article/view/102788
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Summary:Background. In clinical practice the renal functional reserve can be an important tool to identify the early kidney functional damage, cure them and impact diseases prognosis. The aim of this article was to review the concept of renal functional reserve in its relation with serum uric acid level and the quality of life in chronic kidney disease stage I–III. Materials and methods. The study included twenty-two patients with chronic kidney disease stage I–III. We used the renal functional reserve test of Hozhenko A.I. adapted to ambulatory medical care services with measuring serum uric acid level before and after water-salt loading with 0.5% sodium chloride. We assessed the quality of life using the SF-36 questionnaire. Results. Functional renal reserve was preserved in 19 patients (87 %) and averaged 115 ± 54 %, decreased in 2 patients (9 %), average 5.7 ± 2.1 %, and was absent in 1 patient (4 %) and va­lued –41 %. The level of functional renal reserve correlated with serum uric acid level, measured an hour after the water-salt load (p = 0.60; p-level 0.018), and the ave­rage value of uric acid was determined over 4 years (p = 0.74; p-level 0.0015). The renal functional reserve related with the scales of physical functio­ning (p = 0.60; p-level 0.03), vital activity (p = 0.68; p-level 0.01) and mental health (p = 0.58; p-level 0.04) while examining health-related qua­lity of life. Conclusions. Our findings indicate that serum uric acid levels should be controlled in patients with high renal functional reserve.
ISSN:2307-1257
2307-1265