| Literature DB >> 32635265 |
Silvio Borrelli1, Michele Provenzano2, Ida Gagliardi2, Ashour Michael2, Maria Elena Liberti1, Luca De Nicola1, Giuseppe Conte1, Carlo Garofalo1, Michele Andreucci2.
Abstract
In Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) patients, elevated blood pressure (BP) is a frequent finding and is traditionally considered a direct consequence of their sodium sensitivity. Indeed, sodium and fluid retention, causing hypervolemia, leads to the development of hypertension in CKD. On the other hand, in non-dialysis CKD patients, salt restriction reduces BP levels and enhances anti-proteinuric effect of renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system inhibitors in non-dialysis CKD patients. However, studies on the long-term effect of low salt diet (LSD) on cardio-renal prognosis showed controversial findings. The negative results might be the consequence of measurement bias (spot urine and/or single measurement), reverse epidemiology, as well as poor adherence to diet. In end-stage kidney disease (ESKD), dialysis remains the only effective means to remove dietary sodium intake. The mismatch between intake and removal of sodium leads to fluid overload, hypertension and left ventricular hypertrophy, therefore worsening the prognosis of ESKD patients. This imposes the implementation of a LSD in these patients, irrespective of the lack of trials proving the efficacy of this measure in these patients. LSD is, therefore, a rational and basic tool to correct fluid overload and hypertension in all CKD stages. The implementation of LSD should be personalized, similarly to diuretic treatment, keeping into account the volume status and true burden of hypertension evaluated by ambulatory BP monitoring.Entities:
Keywords: cardiovascular risk; hypertension; mortality; prognosis; salt intake; sodium
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32635265 PMCID: PMC7369961 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21134744
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Formulas to convert sodium in salt (sodium chloride) and vice versa, according to units of measurement.
| grams of sodium = mmol of sodium × 0.023 |
| grams of salt = mmol of sodium × 0.058 (or mmol of sodium/17) |
| grams of sodium = grams of salt × 0.394 |
| grams of salt = grams of sodium × 2.542 |
Studies evaluating the effect of urinary sodium excretion (UNaV) on end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) and cardiovascular (CV) outcomes in patients with or without Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD).
| Author [ref], Year | Type | Sample Size | Mean eGFR | Method to Assess UNaV | Prevalence LSD | ESKD | CV Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Torres, V.E. [ | Post-hoc analysis | 486 | 48.6 | Multiple 24 h urine sample | n.a. | Averaged UNaV is associated with increased risk for the combined endpoint of death, ESRD or 50% eGFR decline | n.a. |
| He, J. [ | Longitudinal prospective | 3757 | 43.4 | Three 24 h urine sample | 27.7% | Highest quartile of UNaV (>194.6 mmol/day) is associated with higher risk of ESKD | n.a. |
| Mills, K.T. [ | Longitudinal prospective | 3757 | 43.4 | sodium/creatinine ratio from multiple 24 h urine samples | 25.0% | n.a. | Highest quartile of calibrated UNaV (>4548 mg/g) is associated with higher risk of composite CV endpoints [HR: 1.36 (1.09–1.70)] |
| Fan, L. [ | Post-hoc analysis | 840 | 32.5 | Three or four 24-h urine sample | 25.0% | No association was found between mean baseline UnaV and ESKD [HR 0.99 (95% CI 0.91–1.08)] | n.a. |
| Smyth, A. [ | Post-hoc analysis ONTARGET TRANSCEND trials | 28,879 | 68.4 | Single fasting urine sample | 2.7% | There was no association between estimated UNaV and risk of renal outcomes (ESKD or 30% eGFR decline) | n.a. |
| Vegter, S. [ | Post-hoc analysis of REIN1 and -2 trials | 500 | 43.2 | sodium/creatinine ratio from multiple 24 h urine samples | 22.2% | Unadjusted analysis showed association between UNaV and renal outcome, which disappears after adjustment for proteinuria | n.a. |
| Lambers Heerspink, H.J. [ | Post-hoc analysis of RENAAL and IDNT trials | 1177 | 44.0 | sodium/creatinine ratio from multiple 24 h urine samples | 33.3% | In the group of patients treated with ARBs, thelowest UNaV tertiles of were associated with improved renal outcome [HR: 0.57 (0.39–0.84)] | In the group of patients treated with ARBs, the lowest UNaV tertiles were associated with improved CV outcome [HR: 0.54 (0.34–0.86)] |
| Thomas, M.C. [ | Longitudinal prospective | 2807 | n.a. | a single 24 h urine collection | 25% | In diabetic patients, UnaV was inversely associated with the cumulative incidence of ESRD. | n.a. |
Abbreviations: n.a.: not applicable. ARBs: Angiotensin Receptor Blockers.
Figure 1Potential pathogenic mechanisms of hypertension in CKD due to high salt intake. Abbreviations: CKD: Chronic Kidney Disease; AT-II: Angiotensin-II; CNS; Central Nervous System; CV: cardiovascular.
Studies evaluating the effect of urinary sodium excretion (UNaV) on mortality in ESKD patients.
| Author [ref], Year | Type | Sample Size | Dietary Sodium Evaluation | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| McCausland [ | Post-hoc analysis of HEMO trial | 1170 | 48 h food diary | Higher dietary salt intake is associated with greater mortality. |
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| Dong [ | Retrospective analysis | 305 | 3-day dietary records | Higher dietary salt intake is associated with lower mortality (aHR:0.45 (0.23–0.90) |