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  3. The complexity of kidney disease and diagnosing it - Cystatin C, selective glomerular hypofiltration syndromes and proteome regulation.
 

The complexity of kidney disease and diagnosing it - Cystatin C, selective glomerular hypofiltration syndromes and proteome regulation.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/174885
Date of Publication
March 2023
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Universitätsinstitut ...

Contributor
Malmgren, Linnea
Öberg, Carl
den Bakker, Emil
Leion, Felicia
Siódmiak, Joanna
Åkesson, Anna
Lindström, Veronica
Herou, Erik
Dardashti, Alain
Xhakollari, Liana
Grubb, Gabriel
Strevens, Helena
Abrahamson, Magnus
Helmersson-Karlqvist, Johanna
Magnusson, Martin
Björk, Jonas
Nyman, Ulf
Ärnlöv, Johan
Ridefeldt, Peter
Åkerfeldt, Torbjörn
Hansson, Magnus
Sjöström, Anna
Mårtensson, Johan
Itoh, Yoshihisa
Grubb, David
Tenstad, Olav
Hansson, Lars-Olov
Olafsson, Isleifur
Campos, Araceli Jarquin
Risch, Martin
Risch, Lorenzorcid-logo
Universitätsinstitut für Klinische Chemie (UKC)
Larsson, Anders
Nordin, Gunnar
Pottel, Hans
Christensson, Anders
Bjursten, Henrik
Bökenkamp, Arend
Grubb, Anders
Subject(s)

600 - Technology::610...

Series
Journal of internal medicine
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
0954-6820
Publisher
Blackwell Scientific Publications
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1111/joim.13589
PubMed ID
36385445
Uncontrolled Keywords

kidney disease proteo...

Description
Estimation of kidney function is often part of daily clinical practice, mostly done by using the endogenous GFR-markers creatinine or cystatin C. A recommendation to use both markers in parallel in 2010 has resulted in new knowledge concerning the pathophysiology of kidney disorders by identification of a new set of kidney disorders, selective glomerular hypofiltration syndromes. These syndromes, connected to strong increases in mortality and morbidity, are characterised by a selective reduction in the glomerular filtration of 5-30 kDa molecules, such as cystatin C, compared to the filtration of small molecules < 1kDa dominating the glomerular filtrate e.g., water, urea, creatinine. At least two types of such disorders, shrunken or elongated pore syndrome, are possible according to the pore model for glomerular filtration. Selective glomerular hypofiltration syndromes are prevalent in investigated populations, and patients with these syndromes often display normal measured GFR or creatinine-based GFR-estimates. The syndromes are characterised by proteomic changes promoting the development of atherosclerosis, indicating antibodies and specific receptor-blocking substances as possible new treatment modalities. Presently, the KDIGO guidelines for diagnosing kidney disorders do not recommend cystatin C as a general marker of kidney function and will therefore not allow the identification of a considerable number of patients with selective glomerular hypofiltration syndromes. Furthermore, as cystatin C is uninfluenced by muscle mass, diet or variations in tubular secretion and cystatin C-based GFR-estimation equations do not require controversial race or sex terms, it is obvious that cystatin C should be a part of future KDIGO guidelines. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/88978
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Journal_of_Internal_Medicine_-_2022_-_Malmgren_-_The_complexity_of_kidney_disease_and_diagnosing_it___Cystatin_C_selective.pdftextAdobe PDF2.25 MBacceptedOpen
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