Institute of Molecular Biomedicine, Faculty of Medicine, Comenius University, Sasinkova 4, 811 08, Bratislava, Slovakia.
Department of Pediatrics, National Institute of Children's Diseases, Faculty of Medicine, Comenius University, Bratislava, Slovakia.
Sci Rep. 2020 Dec 4;10(1):21260. doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-78209-1.
Saliva can be used as an alternative diagnostic fluid enabling easy and non-invasive disease monitoring. Urea and creatinine can be measured in saliva and both were shown to be increased in renal failure. However, the dynamics of these markers during the development of kidney diseases is unknown. We aimed to describe the dynamics of salivary urea and creatinine in various animal models of acute kidney injury (AKI) and chronic kidney disease (CKD) and in patients with different stages AKI or CKD. Ninety Wistar rats underwent bilateral nephrectomy (BNX), ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI) or glycerol-induced kidney injury to model AKI. CKD was modelled using 5/6 nephrectomy. In the clinical part 57 children aged 12.6 ± 4.9 years with AKI (n = 11) or CKD (n = 46) and 29 healthy controls (aged 10.2 ± 3.7 years) were enrolled. Saliva and blood samples were collected in both, animal experiments and the human study. In animal models of AKI, plasma urea and creatinine were higher than in controls. An increase of salivary urea and creatinine (twofold) was observed in BNX and IRI, but only after 12 h and 24 h, respectively. In glycerol nephropathy and 5/6 nephrectomy, salivary urea increased (by 100% and by 50%), while salivary creatinine did not change during the observation period. Salivary urea and creatinine were significantly higher in all patients compared to controls (threefold) and in both, AKI and CKD they were associated with the severity of renal failure. Plasma and salivary concentrations correlated only in children with renal failure (R = 0.72 for urea; R = 0.93 for creatinine), but not in controls (R = -0.007 for urea; R = 0.02 for creatinine). Our study indicates that during the development of renal impairment saliva could be used for non-invasive monitoring in higher stages of AKI or CKD, rather than for screening of early stages of kidney diseases.
唾液可以作为一种替代的诊断液,便于进行简单且非侵入性的疾病监测。唾液中的尿素和肌酐可以被测量,且两者都在肾衰竭中升高。然而,这些标志物在肾脏病发展过程中的动态变化尚不清楚。我们旨在描述唾液中尿素和肌酐在各种急性肾损伤 (AKI) 和慢性肾脏病 (CKD) 动物模型以及不同阶段 AKI 或 CKD 患者中的动态变化。90 只 Wistar 大鼠接受双侧肾切除术 (BNX)、缺血再灌注损伤 (IRI) 或甘油诱导的肾损伤以模拟 AKI。CKD 通过 5/6 肾切除术建模。在临床部分,纳入 57 名年龄为 12.6±4.9 岁的 AKI (n=11) 或 CKD (n=46) 患儿和 29 名健康对照者 (年龄为 10.2±3.7 岁)。在动物实验和人类研究中都采集了唾液和血液样本。在 AKI 动物模型中,血浆尿素和肌酐高于对照组。在 BNX 和 IRI 中,观察到唾液尿素和肌酐升高 (两倍),但分别在 12 小时和 24 小时后。在甘油肾病和 5/6 肾切除术中,唾液尿素增加 (增加 100%和 50%),而在观察期间,唾液肌酐没有变化。与对照组相比,所有患者的唾液尿素和肌酐均显著升高 (三倍),且在 AKI 和 CKD 中,它们与肾衰竭的严重程度相关。血浆和唾液浓度仅在肾衰竭儿童中相关 (尿素为 R=0.72;肌酐为 R=0.93),而在对照组中不相关 (尿素为 R=0.007;肌酐为 R=0.02)。我们的研究表明,在肾功能受损的发展过程中,唾液可用于 AKI 或 CKD 较高阶段的非侵入性监测,而不是用于肾脏病早期阶段的筛查。