Cubeddu Luigi X, Alfieri Anna B, Hoffmann Irene S
Center for the Detection and Treatment of Silent Risk Factors for Metabolic and Cardiovascular Disease, Division of Clinical Pharmacology, School of Pharmacy, Central University of Venezuela, Caracas, Venezuela.
Am J Hypertens. 2008 Jan;21(1):105-10. doi: 10.1038/ajh.2007.6.
We investigated whether levels of albuminuria (urinary albumin excretion (UAE)) below those conventionally accepted as microalbuminuria (<30 mg/day) are sensitive to correction of obesity and obesity-related risk factors.
The effects of a 12-month lifestyle modification-metformin program were evaluated in otherwise healthy overweight/obese "normoalbuminuric" subjects: group I with UAE of <10 mg/day (n = 23) and group II with UAE of 10-29 mg/day (n = 18).
The subjects of group II were older and heavier, and had higher blood pressure (BP) and lower high-density lipoprotein (HDL) levels, than those of group I. Creatinine clearances were also higher in group II (148 +/- 14 ml/min) than in group I (108 +/- 9 ml/min). Although the intervention induced comparable reductions in obesity, BP, lipids and insulin levels in both groups, UAE was significantly reduced in group II (9.1 +/- 1.8 mg/24 h; 60% reduction; P < 0.001), and non-significantly in group I (0.75 +/- 0.5 mg/day; 12% reduction; P > 0.1). Additionally, greater reduction in creatinine clearance was observed in subjects with higher UAE rates. After the intervention, both groups achieved similar UAE rates (5.7 +/- 0.9 and 5.2 +/- 1.0 mg/day; P > 0.10). Basal UAE was related to the subjects' creatinine clearance (r = 0.38; P = 0.04). For both groups together, intervention-induced changes in UAE rates were not significantly related to BP, age, or body weight. However, for group II subjects, BP and UAE reduction were positively associated (r = 0.44; P = 0.03).
UAE of 10-29 mg/day (hyperalbuminuria), below the conventionally used limit to define microalbuminuria, is already associated with a more adverse cardiovascular risk profile, and is exquisitely sensitive to interventions that reduce obesity, BP, and insulin resistance.
我们研究了低于传统上被认为是微量白蛋白尿(<30毫克/天)水平的蛋白尿(尿白蛋白排泄量(UAE))对肥胖及肥胖相关危险因素纠正的敏感性。
对其他方面健康的超重/肥胖“正常白蛋白尿”受试者评估了为期12个月的生活方式改变-二甲双胍方案的效果:第一组UAE<10毫克/天(n = 23),第二组UAE为10 - 29毫克/天(n = 18)。
第二组受试者比第一组年龄更大、体重更重,血压(BP)更高,高密度脂蛋白(HDL)水平更低。第二组的肌酐清除率(148±14毫升/分钟)也高于第一组(108±9毫升/分钟)。尽管干预使两组的肥胖、血压、血脂和胰岛素水平都有类似程度的降低,但第二组的UAE显著降低(9.1±1.8毫克/24小时;降低60%;P<0.001),而第一组无显著降低(0.75±0.5毫克/天;降低12%;P>0.1)。此外,在UAE率较高的受试者中观察到肌酐清除率有更大程度的降低。干预后,两组的UAE率相似(5.7±0.9和5.2±1.0毫克/天;P>0.10)。基础UAE与受试者的肌酐清除率相关(r = 0.38;P = 0.04)。对于两组总体而言,干预引起的UAE率变化与血压、年龄或体重无显著相关性。然而,对于第二组受试者,血压降低与UAE降低呈正相关(r = 0.44;P = 0.03)。
10 - 29毫克/天的UAE(高白蛋白尿),低于传统用于定义微量白蛋白尿的限值,已与更不利的心血管风险状况相关,并且对降低肥胖、血压和胰岛素抵抗的干预措施极为敏感。