📢📢Tweetorial Alert📢📢 1/14
What are the benefits of Sodium-Glucose Cotransporter-2 inhibitors (SGLT2i)?
All of the above? #Flozinators we know #flozins are great & are beneficial in CKD & CV disease, but do they really prevent kidney stones?
How do they work? Does it have anything to do with their effects on magnesium or uric acid? Does the presence of DM make a difference?
Stone formation risk ↑ in DM:
↑ uric acid excretion💎
Impaired ammoniagenesis
↓ in urinary pH levels
Dehydration with urinary concentration 🥤 @Momen_Abbasi renalfellow.org/2023/02/19/kid…
Empagliflozin ↓ urolithiasis risk by approximately 40% in a pooled analysis of randomized clinical trials.
In contrast, another report showed that the adverse effects of SGLT2i might include ↑ nephrolithiasis risk? ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/P…
Potential Mechanisms
SGLT2i ↑ urinary pH by inhibiting Na-H exchanger & bicarbonate reabsorption in the proximal tubule.
SGLT2i ↓ urinary uric acid & Mg, both of which may act as a nidus for stone formation.
Further studies are needed to elucidate mechanisms.
In this @KIReports study, the relationship between several antidiabetic medications & the likelihood of developing urolithiasis in patients with/without DM was explored using a large-scale epidemiologic Japanese database - 1 million patients. kireports.org/article/S2468-…
Cross-sectional study
Data collection from 1/1/21 to 12/31/21.
Urolithiasis was common in patients with DM:
OR, 1.12; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.10–1.13 for males
OR, 1.70; 95% CI, 1.67–1.73 for females
Next, they compared the patient use of several different diabetes meds with patients who did not use these meds.
Only the use of SGLT2i was negatively associated with urolithiasis (OR, 0.95; 95% CI, 0.91–0.98: male & OR, 0.91; 95% CI, 0.86–0.97: female)
Patients Without DM
In ♂, SGLT2i use without DM was associated with a low likelihood of urolithiasis (OR, 0.42; 95% CI, 0.35–0.51).
In contrast, in ♀, SGLT2i use without DM was not significantly associated with a low likelihood of urolithiasis (OR, 0.90; 95% CI, 0.68–1.19).
Study Weaknesses
Couldn’t examine other risks (obesity or HTN) in this database.
Cross-sectional study can’t determine a causal relationship between meds & nephrolithiasis.
Further prospective observational studies are needed-SWEETSTONE is pending. pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35288397/
Conclusions
A novel finding in this study was that SGLT2i use predicted a low likelihood of urolithiasis, whereas use of other antidiabetic medications were associated with an increased likelihood of developing urolithiasis.
Conclusions
SGLT2i were associated with a low likelihood of urolithiasis in ♂️ with/without DM. Findings in ♀️ were only significant for patients with DM.
In vivo & in vitro studies suggest that SGLT2i prevent stone formation via anti-inflammatory & anti-fibrotic effects.
This has been @brian_rifkin with another KI Reports tweetorial.
Keep Calm and #Flozinate On👑🪨 🪨 🪨 🪨!
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🧵Join me in delving into the diagnostic challenges surrounding one of the 🧩enigmatic kidney diseases of our times-Chronic kidney disease of Unknown origin(CKDu)
✅IT OUT 👇
📢📢📢Tweetorial Alert (1/19)!
What is the most common complication of routine outpatient hemodialysis (HD) treatments?
Hypotension is the most commonly reported complication of HD.
Intradialytic hypotension (IDH) occurs in up to 40% of treatments.
Variations in reporting due to multiple definitions of IDH. kireports.org/article/S2468-…
IDH
KDOQI 2005 defined IDH as a decrease of:
≧20 mmHg in systolic blood pressure (SBP), or
≧10 mmHg decrease in mean arterial pressure with symptoms.
Other societies have adopted other definitions.
T1. Diabetes mellitus is commonly encountered in our CKD clinics and so proper monitoring is paramount. We’ll discuss limitations of glucose monitoring in CKD…but first let’s start with a quiz!
T2. Are CKD patients prone to hypoglycemia?
T3. CKD patients are prone to hypoglycemia due to the following reasons:
🍬 high insulin use
🍬 long disease duration
🍬 impaired renal gluconeogenesis
🍬 decreased insulin clearance
🔬CKD pathogenesis is unknown in 20-40% of cases.
🫘 Many of these patients may be listed for kidney transplants.
❓What is the risk of recurrent disease in a transplanted kidney if we have not determined the underlying etiology of CKD?
🧵1/11
Do you routinely get genetic testing on patients with an uncertain cause for their CKD?
Introduction
🧬Use of genetic testing may shorten the duration of diagnostic uncertainty.
🧬The hope is that genomic-driven medicine will additionally help provide personalized treatment.
🧬More specific diagnoses can also aid in patient counseling.
1/ It’s #ThrowbackThursday time at @KIReports! In 1954, the first truly successful kidney transplant was performed.
2/ Richard Herrick (pictured on front left) was the recipient of the first successful kidney transplant and recieved a kidney from his twin brother Ronald Herrick (pictured on front right) cjasn.asnjournals.org/content/4/1/2/…
3/ These brothers were confirmed of being immunologically identical through demonstration that they did not reject each other’s skin grafts. pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15579498/
1/ This week’s #ThrowbackThursday tweetorial is a quick reference to the Banff classification which traces its origin to one of the most beautiful places in North America.
2/ In 1991, the first conference was conducted in Banff Canada and included a multidisciplinary team. At this time there were considerable differences between pathologists for biopsy interpretation. A standardized approach to improve patient care was proposed.