Wu Henry H L, McDonnell Thomas, Chinnadurai Rajkumar
Renal Research Laboratory, Kolling Institute of Medical Research, Royal North Shore Hospital, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2065, Australia.
Department of Renal Medicine, Northern Care Alliance NHS Foundation Trust, Salford M6 8HD, UK.
Biomedicines. 2023 Apr 11;11(4):1153. doi: 10.3390/biomedicines11041153.
The number of people living with chronic kidney disease (CKD) is growing as our global population continues to expand. With aging, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease being major harbingers of kidney disease, the number of people diagnosed with diabetic kidney disease (DKD) has grown concurrently. Poor clinical outcomes in DKD could be influenced by an array of factors-inadequate glycemic control, obesity, metabolic acidosis, anemia, cellular senescence, infection and inflammation, cognitive impairment, reduced physical exercise threshold, and, importantly, malnutrition contributing to protein-energy wasting, sarcopenia, and frailty. Amongst the various causes of malnutrition in DKD, the metabolic mechanisms of vitamin B (B1 (Thiamine), B2 (Riboflavin), B3 (Niacin/Nicotinamide), B5 (Pantothenic Acid), B6 (Pyridoxine), B8 (Biotin), B9 (Folate), and B12 (Cobalamin)) deficiency and its clinical impact has garnered greater scientific interest over the past decade. There remains extensive debate on the biochemical intricacies of vitamin B metabolic pathways and how their deficiencies may affect the development of CKD, diabetes, and subsequently DKD, and vice-versa. Our article provides a review of updated evidence on the biochemical and physiological properties of the vitamin B sub-forms in normal states, and how vitamin B deficiency and defects in their metabolic pathways may influence CKD/DKD pathophysiology, and in reverse how CKD/DKD progression may affect vitamin B metabolism. We hope our article increases awareness of vitamin B deficiency in DKD and the complex physiological associations that exist between vitamin B deficiency, diabetes, and CKD. Further research efforts are needed going forward to address the knowledge gaps on this topic.
随着全球人口持续增长,慢性肾脏病(CKD)患者数量也在不断增加。随着衰老、糖尿病和心血管疾病成为肾脏疾病的主要先兆,糖尿病肾病(DKD)的确诊人数也同步增长。DKD患者不良的临床结局可能受一系列因素影响,包括血糖控制不佳、肥胖、代谢性酸中毒、贫血、细胞衰老、感染与炎症、认知障碍、体育锻炼阈值降低,以及最重要的营养不良,后者会导致蛋白质 - 能量消耗、肌肉减少症和虚弱。在DKD营养不良的各种原因中,维生素B(B1(硫胺素)、B2(核黄素)、B3(烟酸/烟酰胺)、B5(泛酸)、B6(吡哆醇)、B8(生物素)、B9(叶酸)和B12(钴胺素))缺乏的代谢机制及其临床影响在过去十年中引起了更大的科学关注。关于维生素B代谢途径的生化复杂性以及它们的缺乏如何影响CKD、糖尿病以及随后的DKD的发展,反之亦然,仍存在广泛的争论。我们的文章综述了关于正常状态下维生素B各亚型的生化和生理特性的最新证据,以及维生素B缺乏及其代谢途径缺陷如何影响CKD/DKD的病理生理学,反之CKD/DKD的进展又如何影响维生素B代谢。我们希望我们的文章能提高对DKD中维生素B缺乏以及维生素B缺乏、糖尿病和CKD之间存在的复杂生理关联的认识。未来需要进一步的研究努力来填补这一主题上的知识空白。