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359541

Observational study of metabolic syndrome among renal transplant recipients in Kasr Al-Aini School of Medicine: a single-center study

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Last updated: 05 Jan 2025

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Abstract

Introduction
The metabolic syndrome (MS) is a constellation of clinical abnormalities related to insulin resistance and inflammation. The syndrome is now recognized as a risk factor for diabetes and cardiovascular disease in the general population. Recent studies suggest that MS is common after kidney transplantation, also possibly being predictive of allograft loss and poor allograft function.
Objectives
We studied the prevalence of MS in Egyptian kidney transplant recipients (from Kasr Al-Aini School of Medicine) and its correlation with C-reactive protein (CRP), serum uric acid (UA), alkaline phosphatase (ALP), different immunosuppressive intakes, and hepatitis C virus (HCV) in these patients.
Patients and methods
The present cross-sectional study was conducted in 2012 on 100 renal transplant recipients, 68 male (68%) and 32 female (32%), with stable kidney function (serum creatinine=1.5±1 mg/dl) in King Fahd Unit, Cairo University. All clinical and laboratory data were recorded, including serum creatinine, UA, cholesterol, triglyceride (TGL), low-density lipoprotein, high-density lipoprotein (HDL), ALP, CRP, and HCV Abs. The presence of MS was determined using NCEP-ATP III criteria, with BMI used in place of waist circumference.
Results
Patients were divided into two groups – MS (group 1): 26 patients, 12 female (46.2%) and 14 male (53.8%), with a mean age of 34.46±9.69 years; and non-MS (group 2): 74 patients, 20 female (27%) and 54 male (73%), with a mean age of 27±8.33 years. There was a highly significant correlation (≤0.001) between CRP and MS, BMI and diabetes mellitus, whereas the correlation between CRP and hypertension, ALP, HCV Abs, alanine aminotransferase (ALT), TGLs level, and HDL was insignificant.
Conclusion
Metabolic syndrome is prevalent in post-renal transplant patients. Serum CRP concentration correlates positively with metabolic syndrome in kidney transplantation patients. The age, weight, BMI, systolic and diastolic BP, serum triglycerides, ALT of MS group were significantly higher than in non-MS group. The duration of hypertension in the MS cases was significantly longer than in non-MS cases.

DOI

10.4103/1687-4625.207189

Keywords

BMI, Cholesterol, C-reactive protein, Metabolic syndrome, Renal transplant recipient

Authors

First Name

Osama Mohammady

Last Name

Mohammed

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First Name

Ahmed Abdalla

Last Name

Aly

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First Name

Dawlat Abdel-Hamid

Last Name

Belal

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First Name

Karim Magdy

Last Name

Soliman

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Volume

23

Article Issue

1

Related Issue

48350

Issue Date

2017-01-01

Receive Date

2015-12-13

Publish Date

2017-01-01

Print ISSN

1687-4625

Online ISSN

2356-8097

Link

https://kamj.journals.ekb.eg/article_359541.html

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https://kamj.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=359541

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359,541

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Kasr Al Ainy Medical Journal

Publication Link

https://kamj.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Observational study of metabolic syndrome among renal transplant recipients in Kasr Al-Aini School of Medicine: a single-center study

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Article

Created At

29 Dec 2024