Literature DB >> 18047917

Mild hyperuricemia and subclinical renal damage in untreated primary hypertension.

Francesca Viazzi1, Giovanna Leoncini, Elena Ratto, Valeria Falqui, Angelica Parodi, Novella Conti, Lorenzo E Derchi, Cinzia Tomolillo, Giacomo Deferrari, Roberto Pontremoli.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Subclinical renal damage and hyperuricemia are not uncommon in patients with primary hypertension. Whether mild hyperuricemia reflects a subclinical impairment of renal function or contributes to its development is currently debated. We investigated the relationship between serum uric-acid levels and the occurrence of early signs of kidney damage.
METHODS: Four hundred eighteen patients with primary hypertension were studied. Albuminuria was measured as the albumin-to-creatinine ratio, and creatinine clearance was estimated by the formula of Cockcroft and Gault. Interlobar resistive index and renal abnormalities, ie, the renal volume-to-resistive index ratio, were evaluated by renal Doppler and ultrasound.
RESULTS: Uric acid was directly related to resistive index (P = .007) in women and to albuminuria (P = .04) in men, and was inversely related to the renal volume-to-resistive index ratio in both men (P = .005) and women (P = .02). Patients with uric-acid levels above the median showed a higher prevalence of microalbuminuria (14% v 7%, P = .012) and of renal abnormalities (41% v 33%, P = .007). Moreover, when creatinine clearance was taken as a covariate, patients with increased uric-acid levels showed higher albuminuria and resistive indices, and a lower renal volume-to-resistive index ratio. Even after adjustment for several risk factors, each standard deviation increase in serum uric acid entailed a 69% higher risk of microalbuminuria, and a 39% greater risk of ultrasound detectable renal abnormalities.
CONCLUSIONS: Mild hyperuricemia is associated with early signs of renal damage, ie, microalbuminuria and ultrasound-detectable abnormalities, regardless of the glomerular filtration rate in primary hypertension.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 18047917     DOI: 10.1016/j.amjhyper.2007.08.010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Hypertens        ISSN: 0895-7061            Impact factor:   2.689


  13 in total

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10.  Association Between Uric Acid and Renal Hemodynamics: Pathophysiological Implications for Renal Damage in Hypertensive Patients.

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