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©2011 Baishideng Publishing Group Co.
World J Cardiol. Jan 26, 2011; 3(1): 1-9
Published online Jan 26, 2011. doi: 10.4330/wjc.v3.i1.1
Published online Jan 26, 2011. doi: 10.4330/wjc.v3.i1.1
Biomarker | Mechanism of action | Advantages | Diagnostic approach | Potential therapeutic approaches |
Catalytic (labile, poorly-liganded) iron | Leads to generation of the hydroxyl radical, the most destructive of ROS; released into the blood in patients with ACS[63]; thought to be involved in oxidative organ damage also in AKI[64]; local cellular and tissue availability of catalytic iron are likely to determine the degree and severity of organ injury in the setting of most hypoxic and other toxic insults[65] | In patients with ACS, the appearance of catalytic iron precedes the rise in serum troponin and detects acute myocardial infarction with an area under the ROC curve of > 90%[63] | Detection of non-transferrin-bound iron in blood by the bleomycin assay[63] | Use of iron chelators to diminish oxidative injury[66] |
NGAL (lipocalin-2, siderocalin) | Natural siderophore produced by renal tubular cells that reduces the availability of catalytic iron, thus limiting oxidative damage and limiting bacterial growth | One of the earliest kidney markers of cardiac and renal injury in animals[65]; detected in humans shortly after AKI and predicts need for in-hospital dialysis[66] | Detection in blood and urine[67] | Overexpression reduces oxidative stress in ischemic injury[67] |
Cystatin C | Cysteine protease inhibitor (housekeeping protein) produced by all nucleated cells that is freely filtered by the glomerulus and reabsorbed in the proximal tubule; no tubular secretion | Not dependent on muscle mass; better predictor of risk of adverse events in patients with CVD than creatinine or eGFR[68] | Detection in blood | - |
KIM-1 | Transmembrane glycoprotein not normally detected in urine[69]; detected in urine early after ischemic or nephrotoxic injury to cells of the proximal tubule[69] | Highly specific for AKI caused by systemic illnesses such as sepsis and not for pre-renal azotemia or drug-induced renal injury[68]; May be elevated before histologic evidence of proximal tubular cell death[69] | Detection in urine | - |
NAG | Large lysosomal brush-border enzyme found in cells of the proximal tubule, not normally filtered by the glomerulus; elevated concentrations found in urine in the setting of AKI, CKD, diabetes mellitus, hypertension and heart failure[71] | Marker of the degree of tubular damage | Detection in urine | - |
IL-18 | Pro-inflammatory cytokine found in urine after acute ischemic damage to proximal tubules[72]; associated with AKI-related mortality, although not organ-specific[69]; might be involved in myocardial cell damage in the setting of ACS[73] | Sensitive and specific to detect ischemic AKI with an area under the ROC curve of 0.78[70]; levels rise 48 h before those of creatinine[68] | Detection in urine | Inhibitors expressed in stem cells are protective in models of myocyte injury[73] |
L-FABP | Selectively binds free unsaturated fatty acids and products of lipid oxidation in cells in the setting of hypoxic tissue injury; detected in the urine in the setting of AKI[74] | Might predict dialysis-free survival in patients with AKI[75] | Detection in urine | - |
Tubular enzymuria | Several enzymes, such as gamma glutamyl transpeptidase, alkaline phosphatase, lactate dehydrogenase, and α and π glutathione S-transferases are released from tubular cells[76-78] | A combination of measures of enzyme levels could potential indicate the presence and location of kidney injury[79] | Detection in urine | - |
- Citation: McCullough PA, Ahmad A. Cardiorenal syndromes. World J Cardiol 2011; 3(1): 1-9
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1949-8462/full/v3/i1/1.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.4330/wjc.v3.i1.1