Renal Tubular Dysfunction in Chronic Alcohol Abuse – Effects of Abstinence

Sergio de Marchi, Emanuela Cecchin, Antonio Basile, Alessandra Bertotti, Renato Nardini, Ettore Bartoli

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Abstract

Alcohol abuse may be accompanied by a variety of disorders of electrolyte and acid-base metabolism. The role of the kidney in the pathogenesis of these disturbances is obscure. We sought to evaluate the alcohol-induced abnormalities of renal function and improvement during abstinence and to assess the relation between renal dysfunction and electrolyte and acid-base disorders. We measured biochemical constituents of blood and renal function before and after four weeks of abstinence in 61 patients with chronic alcoholism who had little or no liver disease. On admission, 18 patients (30 percent) had hypophosphatemia and hypomagnesemia, 13 patients (21 percent) had hypocalcemia, and 8 patients (13 percent) had hypokalemia. Twenty-two patients (36 percent) had a variety of simple and mixed acid-base disorders. Twenty of these patients had metabolic acidosis, and among them, 80 percent had alcoholic acidosis. A wide range of defects in renal tubular function, with normal glomerular filtration rate, was detected in these patients. The defects included decreases in the threshold and maximal reabsorptive ability for glucose (38 percent of patients) and in the renal threshold for phosphate excretion (36 percent); increases in the fractional excretion of β2-microglobulin (38 percent), uric acid (12 percent), calcium (23 percent), and magnesium (21 percent); and aminoaciduria (38 percent). Seventeen patients (28 percent) had a defect in tubular acidification, and five an impairment in urinary concentrating ability. Urinary excretion of N-acetyl-β-d-glucosaminidase and alanine aminopeptidase was increased in 41 and 34 percent of patients, respectively. The abnormalities of blood chemistry and renal tubular function disappeared after four weeks of abstinence. Transient defects in renal tubular function are common in patients with chronic alcoholism and may contribute to their abnormalities of serum electrolyte and blood acid-base profiles., Alcohol abuse may result in a wide range of electrolyte and acid-base disorders, including hypophosphatemia, hypomagnesemia, hypocalcemia, hypokalemia, metabolic acidosis, and respiratory alkalosis1. The severity and clinical importance of these disorders depend largely on the quantity of alcohol ingested, the duration of drinking, and associated factors, such as malnutrition, chronic liver disease, and intercurrent illness. Abnormalities of renal function are common in patients with advanced liver disease, the most common and severe clinical manifestation of chronic alcoholism. These abnormalities, which often have a central role in the clinical illness and may contribute to death, have been studied extensively2

Lingua originaleInglese
pagine (da-a)1927-1934
Numero di pagine8
RivistaNew England Journal of Medicine
Volume329
Numero di pubblicazione26
DOI
Stato di pubblicazionePubblicato - 23 dic 1993
Pubblicato esternamente

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