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1.
Kidney Int Rep ; 9(5): 1254-1264, 2024 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38707820

RESUMEN

Introduction: A reduced salt intake is a vital lifestyle modification in the management of hypertension. Initiatives aimed at decreasing the intake of salt are based on the preference by humans for a salt taste. Salt intake behavior appears to be affected by the balance between attraction to a low salt taste and aversion to a high salt taste. However, aversion to a high salt taste has not yet been quantitively investigated in both healthy individuals and patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). Methods: Assessments of gustatory and aversion thresholds for salt, bitter, sour, and sweet tastes were performed using a stimulant-impregnated test strip in healthy subjects and patients with CKD. Results: In a pilot taste test of 125 healthy subjects, the number of participants with an aversive reaction increased at higher salt concentrations. The threshold for normal taste perception was arbitrarily defined as 10% NaCl, with 47.2% of healthy subjects displaying an aversive reaction. In taste tests performed by 70 patients with CKD, 10% were unable to recognize a salt taste, even at the highest concentration (20% NaCl), suggesting a significant impairment in taste perception in patients with CKD. Only 15.7% of patients with CKD exhibited a normal aversion to NaCl, whereas 78.6% showed the complete loss of aversion to salt. Conclusion: The present results confirmed the anticipated aversive response to a high salt taste in humans and demonstrated its impairment in patients with CKD, implying that patients with CKD have reduced resistance to a high salt intake.

2.
iScience ; 27(2): 109020, 2024 Feb 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38357667

RESUMEN

The immense public health burden of diabetic kidney disease (DKD) has led to an increase in research on the pathophysiology of advanced DKD. The present study focused on the significance of proinflammatory vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 (VCAM1)+ tubules in DKD progression. A retrospective cohort study of DKD patients showed that the percentage of VCAM1+ tubules in kidney samples was correlated with poor renal outcomes. We established an advanced DKD model by partial resection of the kidneys of db/db mice and demonstrated that it closely resembled the human advanced DKD phenotype, with tissue hypoxia, tubular DNA damage, tissue inflammation, and high tubular VCAM1 expression. Luseogliflozin ameliorated tissue hypoxia and proinflammatory responses, including VCAM1+ expression, in tubules. These findings suggest the potential of tubular VCAM1 as a histological marker for poor DKD outcomes. SGLT2 inhibitors may attenuate tissue hypoxia and subsequent tissue inflammation in advanced DKD, thereby ameliorating tubular injury.

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