Publication | Open Access
Burn and Trauma Associated Proteinuria: The Role of Lipid Peroxidation, Renin and Myoglobin
61
Citations
19
References
1988
Year
Serum Renin ActivityLipid PeroxidationTrauma Associated ProteinuriaBurnsOxidative StressInflammationRenal FunctionClinical InjurySepsisAcute Kidney InjuryBurns PatientsChronic Kidney DiseaseHealth SciencesTissue InjuryBurn ManagementPhysiologyWound HealingMetabolismMedicineNephrologyEmergency MedicineTrauma Patients
Ten trauma patients and 13 burns patients were studied intensively for the first 36 h and subsequent 6 days post injury in order to investigate the mechanism of trauma and burn associated proteinuria. Burns patient's initial maximum proteinuria occurred between 4 and 8 h post injury, whilst trauma patients showed greatest proteinuria within 4 h. In both groups coexisting myoglobinuria or marked elevation of serum renin activity was not found during the first 36 h. Following admission serum lipid peroxides rose in burns patients reaching a maximum between 2 and 8 h following injury, after which levels fell rapidly; in contrast trauma patient's values were initially within normal limits, but rose sharply after 12 h with peaks occurring between 16 h and 7 days post injury. Some patients within both groups showed a recurrent protein leak 2 to 5 days post injury. The data suggest that myoglobinuria or raised renin levels do not play an important role in trauma associated proteinuria.
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