Bone, inflammation and chronic kidney disease


Por: Mazzaferro, S, De Martini, N, Rotondi, S, Tartaglione, L, Urena-Torres, P, Bover, J, Pasquali, M, ERA-EDTA Working Grp CKD-MBD

Publicada: 1 jul 2020
Resumen:
Increasing knowledge on inflammatory mediators and bone metabolism highlights the relationship between inflammation and bone disease. During acute illness, inflammatory cells and cytokines modulate bone cells activity so as to mobilize calcium seemingly to supply the metabolic requirements for immune response. In case of long lasting, chronic inflammatory states a condition of maladaptive, smouldering inflammation is realized and negatively affects calcium bone balance. Aging, now nicknamed inflammaging, is regarded as a chronic inflammatory condition, characterized by increased circulating inflammatory cytokines, that contributes to the development of osteoporosis, cardiovascular diseases and chronic kidney disease. In patients with renal insufficiency, the development of bone and mineral disorders (so called CKD-MBD "syndrome") is now a recognized pathogenic factor for the seemingly accelerated process of aging and for the increased risk of cardiovascular death in these patients. The adaptive changes in mineral and bone metabolism developing in the early stages of chronic kidney disease could represent a hypothetical model of accelerated aging, osteoporosis and cardiovascular disease.

Filiaciones:
Mazzaferro, S:
 Sapienza Univ, Dept Translat & Precis Med, Rome, Italy

De Martini, N:
 Sapienza Univ, Dept Translat & Precis Med, Rome, Italy

Rotondi, S:
 ICOT Hosp, Latina, Italy

Tartaglione, L:
 Sapienza Univ, Dept Translat & Precis Med, Rome, Italy

Urena-Torres, P:
 AURA Nord St Ouen, St Ouen, France

 Univ Paris 05, Necker Hosp, Dept Renal Physiol, Paris, France

Bover, J:
 Univ Autonoma Barcelona, Dept Nephrol, Fundacio Puigvert, RedinRen,IIB St Pau, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain

Pasquali, M:
 Azienda Osped Univ Policlin Umberto I, Rome, Italy
ISSN: 00098981





CLINICA CHIMICA ACTA
Editorial
ELSEVIER, RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS, Países Bajos
Tipo de documento: Article
Volumen: 506 Número:
Páginas: 236-240
WOS Id: 000534370700036
ID de PubMed: 32275989

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