Diabetic kidney disease
Merlin C. Thomas,Michael Brownlee,Katalin Susztak,Kumar Sharma,Karin Jandeleit-Dahm,Sophia Zoungas,Peter Rossing,Per-Henrik Groop,Mark E. Cooper +8 more
- 30 Jul 2015
- Vol. 1, Iss: 1, pp 15018
TL;DR: What is now known about the molecular pathogenesis of CKD in patients with diabetes and the key pathways and targets implicated in its progression are summarized and the opportunities to develop new interventions through urgently needed investment in dedicated and focused research are explored.
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Abstract: The kidney is arguably the most important target of microvascular damage in diabetes. A substantial proportion of individuals with diabetes will develop kidney disease owing to their disease and/or other co-morbidity, including hypertension and ageing-related nephron loss. The presence and severity of chronic kidney disease (CKD) identify individuals who are at increased risk of adverse health outcomes and premature mortality. Consequently, preventing and managing CKD in patients with diabetes is now a key aim of their overall management. Intensive management of patients with diabetes includes controlling blood glucose levels and blood pressure as well as blockade of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system; these approaches will reduce the incidence of diabetic kidney disease and slow its progression. Indeed, the major decline in the incidence of diabetic kidney disease (DKD) over the past 30 years and improved patient prognosis are largely attributable to improved diabetes care. However, there remains an unmet need for innovative treatment strategies to prevent, arrest, treat and reverse DKD. In this Primer, we summarize what is now known about the molecular pathogenesis of CKD in patients with diabetes and the key pathways and targets implicated in its progression. In addition, we discuss the current evidence for the prevention and management of DKD as well as the many controversies. Finally, we explore the opportunities to develop new interventions through urgently needed investment in dedicated and focused research. For an illustrated summary of this Primer, visit: http://go.nature.com/NKHDzg.
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Citations
Changing epidemiology of type 2 diabetes mellitus and associated chronic kidney disease
TL;DR: Paradigms in cardiovascular survival in patients with T2DM have contributed to patients surviving longer, allowing sufficient time to develop renal impairment, and this Review explores how the changing epidemiology of T2 DM has influenced the prevalence and incidence of associated CKD across different populations and clinical settings.
570
The Global Epidemiology of Diabetes and Kidney Disease
TL;DR: A narrative review of the prevalence and incidence of diabetes-related kidney disease worldwide and the level of awareness of this disease among people who have it is presented.
539
Poster: Hyperglycemia induces a dynamic cooperativity of histone methylase and demethylase enzymes associated with gene-activating epigenetic marks that coexist on the lysine tail
Assam El-Osta,Assam El-Osta +1 more
- 01 May 2008
TL;DR: In this article, transient hyperglycemia was used to link NFκB-p65 gene expression with H3K4 modifications mediated by the histone methyltransferases (Set7 and SuV39h1) and the lysine-specific demethylase (LSD1).
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Network biology concepts in complex disease comorbidities
TL;DR: Linking network dynamics to the real-life, non-ideal patient in whom diseases co-occur and interact provides a valuable basis for generating hypotheses on molecular disease mechanisms, and provides knowledge that can facilitate drug repurposing and the development of targeted therapeutic strategies.
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The tubular hypothesis of nephron filtration and diabetic kidney disease.
TL;DR: The clinical relevance of increased proximal reabsorption and hyperfiltration in diabetes is demonstrated by the ability of SGLT2 to improve renal outcomes in patients with diabetes, which has been verified in large-scale clinical trials.
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TL;DR: In patients whose diabetes began early in life, a triad is being recognized with increasing frequency; namely, the sequence in the same patient of neuropathy, retinopathy, and nephropathy, which is applied to diabetic patients who usually have shown, first, clinical evidence of Neuropathy; then, diabetic retinitis, and, finally, the nephrolysis of diabetes.
Quinapril treatment abolishes diabetes-associated atherosclerosis in RAGE/apolipoprotein E double knockout mice
Anna M.D. Watson,Jiaze Li,D Samijono,Angelika Bierhaus,Merlin C. Thomas,Karin Jandeleit-Dahm,Mark E. Cooper +6 more
TL;DR: Concomitant inhibition of RAS and RAGE signalling almost completely inhibited the development of experimental DAA, suggesting a dual therapeutic approach may be a superior strategy for the treatment of diabetic macrovascular disease.
Nephropathy in Patients with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus
Eberhard Ritz,Stephan R. Orth +1 more
TL;DR: Some recent and encouraging evidence indicates that diabetic nephropathy and deterioration of renal function are to a certain extent preventable.
Intermittent fasting prevents the progression of type I diabetic nephropathy in rats and changes the expression of Sir2 and p53
TL;DR: It is suggested that IF significantly improves biochemical parameters associated with development of DN and changes the expression of Sir2 and p53.
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