Kidney progression project (KiPP): Protocol for a longitudinal cohort study of progression in chronic kidney disease of unknown etiology in Sri Lanka
Penny Vlahos,Stephen L. Schensul,Nishantha Nanayakkara,Rohana Chandrajith,Lalarukh Haider,Shuchi Anand,Kalinga Tudor Silva,Jean J. Schensul +7 more
TL;DR: This study is the first to foster a multi-disciplinary approach that focuses on disease progression, identifying behavioural and exposure risk factors for rapid kidney function decline, in this progressively fatal disease.
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Abstract: Over the last two decades, a global epidemic of chronic kidney disease of unknown etiology (CKDu) has emerged in rural, arid, agricultural, lowland areas. Endemic regions have reported 15 to 20% prevalence among residents aged 30-60 years. CKDu is a progressive and irreversible disease resulting in renal failure and death in the absence of dialysis or a kidney transplant. While much of the research has focused on identifying etiology, this project seeks to ascertain factors associated with the rapidity of kidney disease progression in one of Sri Lanka's CKDu endemic areas. A sample of 296 male and female residents aged 21 to 65 with moderate CKD, as measured by their serum creatinine level, and a clinical diagnosis of CKDu are followed using quarterly serum testing to track the rate of progression. A baseline survey administered to the entire sample addresses potential risk factors, supplemented by a short survey focusing on changes through time. Concurrently water, soil and air are tested at the local and household levels. The study is the first to foster a multi-disciplinary approach that focuses on disease progression, identifying behavioural and exposure risk factors for rapid kidney function decline, in this progressively fatal disease.
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Citations
Leptospirosis Renal Disease: Emerging Culprit of Chronic Kidney Disease Unknown Etiology.
TL;DR: Emerging evidence with signs of infection were reported in endemic population of Sri Lanka and Nicaragua, indicating that leptospira exposure could play a role in CKDu as a cause of primary kidney disease or a susceptible factor when secondary injury such as heat stress or dehydration aggravates kidney disease.
Possible links between groundwater geochemistry and chronic kidney disease of unknown etiology (CKDu): an investigation from the Ginnoruwa region in Sri Lanka
Shyamalie Balasooriya,Harshaka Munasinghe,A. T. Herath,Saranga Diyabalanage,Oliver A. Ileperuma,Herath Manthrithilake,Christoph Daniel,Kerstin Amann,Christian Zwiener,Johannes A. C. Barth,Rohana Chandrajith +10 more
- 01 Dec 2020
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared the results of 63 groundwater samples collected from selected wells in the Ginnoruwa area of Sri Lanka with non-CKDu patients and found significant differences in major ion geochemical parameters.
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Assessment of groundwater quality using water quality index (WQI): A case study of a hard rock terrain in Sri Lanka
TL;DR: In this paper, 99 groundwater samples from deep boreholes and shallow wells in hard rock aquifers in the Monaragala region, were collected and analyzed for major cations and anions, and some selected trace element contents.
74
Relevance of heat stress and dehydration to chronic kidney disease (CKDu) in Sri Lanka
K.B. Jayasekara,P.N. Kulasooriya,K.N. Wijayasiri,E.D. Rajapakse,D.S. Dulshika,Palitha Bandara,L.F. Fried,A. De Silva,Steven M. Albert +8 more
TL;DR: Investigation of the association between heat stress-dehydration symptoms and risk of chronic kidney disease in agricultural workers in North Central Province, Sri Lanka found that villagers in the high-CKDu prevalence area were more likely to show signs of dehydration.
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Significance of Mg-hardness and fluoride in drinking water on chronic kidney disease of unknown etiology in Monaragala, Sri Lanka
01 Jan 2022
TL;DR: A detailed hydro-geochemical investigation was carried out concurrently with the population screening in the Monaragala district of Sri Lanka where high incidences of chronic kidney disease of unknown etiology (CKDu) are reported as mentioned in this paper .
20
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Cecilia Torres,Cecilia Torres,Aurora Aragón,Marvin González,Kristina Jakobsson,Carl-Gustaf Elinder,Ingvar Lundberg,Catharina Wesseling,Catharina Wesseling +8 more
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