Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1969375 Clinical Biochemistry 2011 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectivesThis study was undertaken to evaluate the relationship between serum bilirubin concentrations and the degree of urinary albumin excretion in hypertensive patients.Design and methodsA total of 120 hypertensive subjects were enrolled, in which 80 (67%) with normoalbuminuria (albumin excretion rate [AER] of < 20 μg/min), 30 (25%) with microalbuminuria (AER of 20–200 μg/min) and 10 (8%) with macroalbuminuria (AER > 200 μg/min). Logarithmic (log) transformation of urinary albumin excretion was carried out before performing correlation and regression analysis.ResultsPatients with micro- or macroalbuminuria had significantly lower serum bilirubin concentrations (P = 0.004). By multivariate regression analysis, serum bilirubin concentration was an independent determinant of albuminuria and had an inverse correlation with log (urinary albumin excretion) in hypertensive patients (β = − 0.189, P = 0.023).ConclusionsThese findings may partly explain the pathogenetic processes that link microalbuminuria and enhanced cardiovascular risk in hypertensive patients.

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