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Influence of oral vitamin E therapy on micro-inflammation and cardiovascular disease markers in chronic hemodialysis patients

Publication at Second Faculty of Medicine |
2006

Abstract

Background. The aim of this study was to evaluate the influence of oral vitamin E therapy on serum concentrations of several markers of micro-inflammation and cardiovascular disease in chronic hemodialysis (HD) patients.

Methods. 29 HD patients were randomized into two groups: 15 patients were treated orally with 400mg of vitamin E daily for a period of five weeks, and 14 patients received no antioxidant supplementation. Before and after vitamin E therapy, serum concentrations of vitamin E (high-performance liquid chromatography), pregnancy-associated plasma protein-A (immunochemical - TRACE assay), C-reactive protein (nephelometry), intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ELISA), and E-selectin (ELISA) were measured.

HD patients were compared with 16 healthy controls. Results.

Baseline serum concentrations of PAPP-A and CRP were significantly higher in HD patients than in healthy controls (PAPP-A: 26.23 +/- 11.94 vs. 11.41 +/- 1.94 mIU/L, p < 0.001; CRP: 5.20 +/- 3.50 vs. 3.40 +/- 3.80 mg/L, p < 0.05). After five weeks of oral vitamin E intake, serum PAPP-A, CRP, ICAM-1, and E-selectin concentrations remained unchanged in both groups of HD patients.

Conclusion. Chronic micro-inflammation in HD patients is documented by the elevation of CRP and PAPP-A.

A daily oral dose of 400 mg of vitamin E does not seem to be able to reduce enhanced oxidative stress and micro-inflammation in chronic HD patients.