We found a match
Your institution may have rights to this item. Sign in to continue.
- Title
Association between uric acid, renal haemodynamics and arterial stiffness over the natural history of type 1 diabetes.
- Authors
Lytvyn, Yuliya; Singh, Sunita K.; Lai, Vesta; Tse, Josephine; Cham, Leslie; Cherney, David Z. I.; Advani, Andrew; Sochett, Etienne; Bjornstad, Petter; Lovshin, Julie A.; Boulet, Genevieve; Farooqi, Mohammed A.; Weisman, Alanna; Perkins, Bruce A.; Lovblom, Leif E.; Keenan, Hillary A.; Brent, Michael H.; Paul, Narinder; Bril, Vera
- Abstract
Aims: To examine the relationship between normal plasma uric acid (PUA) levels, renal haemodynamic function, arterial stiffness and plasma renin and aldosterone over a wide range of type 1 diabetes (T1D) durations in adolescents, young adults and older adults. Materials and methods: PUA, glomerular filtration rate (GFR), effective renal plasma flow (ERPF), vascular stiffness parameters (aortic augmentation index [AIx], carotid AIx, carotid femoral pulse wave velocity [cfPWV]), and plasma renin and aldosterone were measured during a euglycaemic clamp in people with T1D: 27 adolescents (mean ± SD age 16.8 ± 1.9 years), 52 young adults (mean ± SD age 25.6 ± 5.5 years) and 66 older adults (mean ± SD age 65.7 ± 7.5 years). Results: PUA was highest in patients with the longest T1D duration: 197 ± 44 μmol/L in adolescents versus 264 ± 82 μmol/L in older adults (P < 0.001). Higher PUA correlated with lower GFR only in older adults, even after correcting for age, glycated haemoglobin and sex (β = −2.12 ± 0.56; P = 0.0003), but not in adolescents or young adults. Higher PUA correlated with lower carotid AIx (β = −1.90, P = 0.02) in adolescents. In contrast, PUA correlated with higher cfPWV (P = 0.02) and higher plasma renin (P = 0.01) in older adults with T1D. Conclusions: The relationship between higher PUA with lower GFR, increased arterial stiffness and renin angiotensin aldosterone system (RAAS) activation was observed only in older adults with longstanding T1D. T1D duration may modify the association between PUA, renal haemodynamic function and RAAS activation, leading to renal vasoconstriction and ischaemia. Further work must determine whether pharmacological PUA‐lowering prevents or reverses injurious haemodynamic and neurohormonal sequelae of longstanding T1D, thereby improving clinical outcomes.
- Subjects
TYPE 1 diabetes; URIC acid; HEMODYNAMICS; KIDNEYS; ARTERIAL diseases; NATURAL history
- Publication
Diabetes, Obesity & Metabolism, 2019, Vol 21, Issue 6, p1388
- ISSN
1462-8902
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/dom.13665