Turkish Journal of Nephrology
Original Article

NEOPTERIN LEVELS IN PATIENTS UNDERGOING CHRONIC HEMODIALYSIS

1.

Fırat Üniversitesi Tıp Fakültesi İç Hastalıkları Anabilim Dalı, Nefroloji Bilim Dalı, ELAZIĞ

2.

Fırat Üniversitesi Tıp Fakültesi İmmünoloji Anabilim Dalı, ELAZIĞ

Turkish J Nephrol 2002; 11: 18-21
Read: 1202 Downloads: 781 Published: 14 March 2019

Both uremia and bioincompatibility of hemodialysis result in a chronic systemic inflammatory syndrome. There is evidence for the activation of monocytes and subsequent release of several proinflammatory cytokines in uremic patients. Neopterin is a low molecular weight product released by human macrophages upon stimulation with interferon gamma. It permits the quantification of the level of cellular immune activation in vivo. The aim of our investigation was to characterize neopterin levels in patients without systemic infection undergoing chronic dialysis therapy. Forty-six patients on chronic hemodialysis and 40 healthy controls were selected for the study on the basis of absence of any clinical evidence for infections during the last 3 weeks prior to the study. Our data show the presence of higher serum levels of neopterin in hemodialysed subjects with respect to the controls ( 53.9±17.8 vs 12.3±3.8 nmol/l; p<0.0001). On average the neopterin levels decreased from 53.9±17.8 nmol/l at baseline to 40.0±15.6 nmol/l at the end of hemodialysis (p<0.001). According to our results, raised neopterin levels before and after hemodialysis therapy confirm the presence of a chronic systemic inflammatory state in hemodialysis patients.

Files
EISSN 2667-4440