Publication | Closed Access
Elevated acute phase reactants in hemodialysis patients.
32
Citations
25
References
1990
Year
Uncomplicated Hemodialysis PatientsThrombosisHemodialysisRenal FunctionHemodialysis PatientsHealthy SubjectsMedicineKidney FailureHematologySepsisLaboratory MedicineDialysis TherapyClinical ChemistryAcute Kidney InjuryChronic Kidney DiseaseNephrologyEmergency Medicine
The incidence of elevated acute phase reactants, measured by nephelometry, was examined in 69 otherwise uncomplicated hemodialysis patients in comparison with 30 healthy subjects. Increased C-reactive protein was found in 40.6% of the patients (p less than 0.001 vs controls) and the degree of increase was correlated with the duration of hemodialysis. Haptoglobin was increased in 33.3% (p less than 0.01 vs controls). High levels of alpha-1-acid glycoprotein and alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor were present in 15.9% and 2.9%, respectively; these frequencies were not significantly different from controls. No differences between pre- and postdialysis values were observed. It is concluded that, unlike C-reactive protein, both alpha-1-acid glycoprotein and alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor maintain an excellent specificity in hemodialysis patients. Vice versa, haptoglobin may be unreliable as an acute phase reactant in these patients because of the unacceptably high false-positive rate.
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