Literature DB >> 21705784

Does hypokalaemia cause nephropathy? An observational study of renal function in patients with Bartter or Gitelman syndrome.

S B Walsh1, E Unwin, R Vargas-Poussou, P Houillier, R Unwin.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Hypokalaemic nephropathy has been described in patients with chronic potassium depletion; it is a condition in which proximal tubular vacuolization and interstitial fibrosis occur, resulting in a decline in glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and, in some cases, renal failure. It has been described in patients with chronic diarrhoea, eating disorders, laxative abuse and primary hyperaldosteronism; also occasionally in Bartter syndrome (BS), in which severe hypokalaemia accompanies significant renal sodium and water losses, though rarely in Gitelman syndrome (GS), in which there is equally severe hypokalaemia, but only modest sodium losses. AIM: We hypothesized that hypokalaemic nephropathy may not be due to potassium depletion per se, but persistently elevated circulating levels of aldosterone, possibly with superimposed episodes of renal hypoperfusion. DESIGN AND METHODS: We searched UK and European data sets to retrospectively compare serum and urinary parameters in patients with GS and BS.
RESULTS: The patients with GS often had lower serum potassium concentrations than patients with BS, but the BS patients had significantly higher serum creatinine concentrations and lower estimated GFRs (eGFR). BS patients had significantly higher fractional excretions of sodium compared with GS patients, as well as higher plasma renin activities and serum aldosterone levels.
CONCLUSION: These findings show that in genetically confirmed cases of BS and GS, the degree of hypokalaemia (as an index of chronic potassium depletion) does not correlate with GFR, and that on-going sodium and water losses, and consequent secondary hyperaldosteronism, may play a more important role in the aetiology of hypokalaemic nephropathy.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21705784     DOI: 10.1093/qjmed/hcr095

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  QJM        ISSN: 1460-2393


  16 in total

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2.  Resistance to Insulin in Patients with Gitelman Syndrome and a Subtle Intermediate Phenotype in Heterozygous Carriers: A Cross-Sectional Study.

Authors:  Anne Blanchard; Marion Vallet; Laurence Dubourg; Marguerite Hureaux; Julien Allard; Jean-Philippe Haymann; Renaud de la Faille; Armelle Arnoux; Aurelie Dinut; Damien Bergerot; Pierre-Hadrien Becker; Pierre-Yves Courand; Stéphanie Baron; Pascal Houillier; Ivan Tack; Olivier Devuyst; Xavier Jeunemaitre; Michel Azizi; Rosa Vargas-Poussou
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Review 3.  An Integrated View of Potassium Homeostasis.

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5.  Gitelman syndrome with a novel frameshift variant in SLC12A3 gene accompanied by chronic kidney disease and type 2 diabetes mellitus.

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6.  Patients with hypokalemia develop WNK bodies in the distal convoluted tubule of the kidney.

Authors:  Martin N Thomson; Wolfgang Schneider; Kerim Mutig; David H Ellison; Ralph Kettritz; Sebastian Bachmann
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Authors:  António José Cruz; Alexandra Castro
Journal:  BMJ Case Rep       Date:  2013-01-22

8.  Long-term Clinical Course after Living Kidney Donation by a Patient with Gitelman Syndrome Harboring a Compound Heterozygous Mutation of the SLC12A3 Gene.

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Journal:  Intern Med       Date:  2020-12-15       Impact factor: 1.271

9.  Does hypokalemia contribute to acute kidney injury in chronic laxative abuse?

Authors:  Eun-Young Lee; Hyaejin Yoon; Joo-Hark Yi; Woon-Yong Jung; Sang-Woong Han; Ho-Jung Kim
Journal:  Kidney Res Clin Pract       Date:  2015-03-27

10.  Acidosis and Deafness in Patients with Recessive Mutations in FOXI1.

Authors:  Sven Enerbäck; Daniel Nilsson; Noel Edwards; Mikael Heglind; Sumaya Alkanderi; Emma Ashton; Asma Deeb; Feras E B Kokash; Abdul R A Bakhsh; William Van't Hoff; Stephen B Walsh; Felice D'Arco; Arezoo Daryadel; Soline Bourgeois; Carsten A Wagner; Robert Kleta; Detlef Bockenhauer; John A Sayer
Journal:  J Am Soc Nephrol       Date:  2017-12-14       Impact factor: 10.121

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