Microalbuminuria: Marker or Maker of Cardiovascular Disease

Advancing age is associated with albuminuria and vascular changes. This review will explore the putative links between the two. Vascular ageing involves endothelial dysfunction as well as increased arterial diameter, wall thickness and stiffness, ultimately leading to arterial sclerosis. This proces...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nephron 2011-08, Vol.119 (Suppl 1), p.e6-e10
Hauptverfasser: Abdelhafiz, Ahmed H., Ahmed, Shameela, El Nahas, Meguid
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Advancing age is associated with albuminuria and vascular changes. This review will explore the putative links between the two. Vascular ageing involves endothelial dysfunction as well as increased arterial diameter, wall thickness and stiffness, ultimately leading to arterial sclerosis. This process is accelerated by a defective vascular repair process. Endothelial dysfunction is likely to be involved in the initiation and development of microalbuminuria. It is often followed by the development and progression of atherosclerosis. Initially, microalbuminuria is reversible but becomes fixed with the progression of vascular structural changes including glomerulosclerosis. The prevalence of microalbuminuria increases with age and has been shown to be a marker of widespread microvasculopathy at various levels including cerebral, cardiac and renal microcirculations. This has been linked to endpoint clinical events, with microalbuminuria increasing the risk of cognitive impairment and strokes, cardiovascular disease outcomes, and progression to end-stage renal failure. Evidence of microvascular damage such as microalbuminuria associated with increased cardiovascular risk may suggest that microvascular damage and dysfunction predate overt macrovascular disease. Microalbuminuria and reduced glomerular filtration rate (GFR) may be markers of different pathologic processes. It is likely that microalbuminuria and reduced GFR simply represent, respectively, the spectrum of renal vascular manifestations from systemic endothelial dysfunction (microvascular disease) to systemic atherosclerosis (macrovascular disease).
ISSN:1660-2129
1660-8151
1660-2129
2235-3186
DOI:10.1159/000328015