Urinary protein markers of renal dysfunction in full-term newborns with disorders of early neonatal period

Background: Urinary proteins may help to understand the physiology and diagnose renal dysfunction in sick infants. The renal function in ill full-term newborns with disorders of early neonatal period by means of detecting specific protein biomarkers in the urine was studied. Materials and methods:...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Juliya Hodovanets, Anastasiya Babintseva, Nicholas Tibor Longford, Ludmila Agafonova
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hygeia Press di Corridori Marinella 2018-02-01
Series:Journal of Pediatric and Neonatal Individualized Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.jpnim.com/index.php/jpnim/article/view/502
id doaj-866ce6bdef354d8ab8376f39bfa4e1fc
record_format Article
spelling doaj-866ce6bdef354d8ab8376f39bfa4e1fc2020-11-25T01:26:58ZengHygeia Press di Corridori MarinellaJournal of Pediatric and Neonatal Individualized Medicine2281-06922018-02-0171e070109e07010910.7363/070109421Urinary protein markers of renal dysfunction in full-term newborns with disorders of early neonatal periodJuliya Hodovanets0Anastasiya Babintseva1Nicholas Tibor Longford2Ludmila Agafonova3Department of Pediatrics, Neonatology and Perinatal Medicine, Higher State Educational Establishment of Ukraine “Bukovinian State Medical University”, Chernivtsi, UkraineDepartment of Pediatrics, Neonatology and Perinatal Medicine, Higher State Educational Establishment of Ukraine “Bukovinian State Medical University”, Chernivtsi, UkraineNeonatal Data Analysis Unit, Department of Medicine, Imperial College, Chelsea and Westminster Campus, London, UKDepartment of Pediatrics, Neonatology and Perinatal Medicine, Higher State Educational Establishment of Ukraine “Bukovinian State Medical University”, Chernivtsi, UkraineBackground: Urinary proteins may help to understand the physiology and diagnose renal dysfunction in sick infants. The renal function in ill full-term newborns with disorders of early neonatal period by means of detecting specific protein biomarkers in the urine was studied. Materials and methods: A prospective cohort study on 205 full-term newborns was performed including 55 healthy infants, 55 newborns with clinical signs of moderate disorders of early neonatal period, 50 newborns with severe neonatal disorders without acute kidney injury (AKI), and 45 newborns with both severe neonatal disorders and AKI. The urinary concentrations of total protein (UTPr), albumin (UAlb), immunoglobulin G (UIgG), α1-microglobulin (Uα1-MG), and β2-microglobulin (Uβ2-MG) were determined by means of laboratory tests. Results: As compared to healthy newborns, full-term neonates with moderate disorders of early neonatal period developed dysfunction of the glomerular membrane (selective proteinuria with excessive excretion of UAlb), and proximal tubules (increased Uα1-MG). More severe neonatal disorders in term newborns are accompanied by selective proteinuria together with more pronounced tubular failure (excessive urinary excretion of Uα1-MG and Uβ2-MG). Formation of AKI in term infants is associated with complex disorders of all structural elements of the nephron, manifested by extremely high levels of total protein markers of glomerular (UTPr, UAlb and UIgG) and tubular (Uα1-MG and Uβ2-MG) dysfunction in urine. Conclusions: The measurement of urinary protein biomarkers in sick full-term newborns with clinical signs of disorders of early neonatal period demonstrated renal dysfunction not only in infants with AKI. The biochemical changes found in critically ill newborns require timely diagnosis promoting the right choice of intensive therapy with the aim to prevent the development of severe renal pathology and chronic renal failure in the future.https://www.jpnim.com/index.php/jpnim/article/view/502full-term newbornrenal dysfunctionacute kidney injuryurinary protein markers
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Juliya Hodovanets
Anastasiya Babintseva
Nicholas Tibor Longford
Ludmila Agafonova
spellingShingle Juliya Hodovanets
Anastasiya Babintseva
Nicholas Tibor Longford
Ludmila Agafonova
Urinary protein markers of renal dysfunction in full-term newborns with disorders of early neonatal period
Journal of Pediatric and Neonatal Individualized Medicine
full-term newborn
renal dysfunction
acute kidney injury
urinary protein markers
author_facet Juliya Hodovanets
Anastasiya Babintseva
Nicholas Tibor Longford
Ludmila Agafonova
author_sort Juliya Hodovanets
title Urinary protein markers of renal dysfunction in full-term newborns with disorders of early neonatal period
title_short Urinary protein markers of renal dysfunction in full-term newborns with disorders of early neonatal period
title_full Urinary protein markers of renal dysfunction in full-term newborns with disorders of early neonatal period
title_fullStr Urinary protein markers of renal dysfunction in full-term newborns with disorders of early neonatal period
title_full_unstemmed Urinary protein markers of renal dysfunction in full-term newborns with disorders of early neonatal period
title_sort urinary protein markers of renal dysfunction in full-term newborns with disorders of early neonatal period
publisher Hygeia Press di Corridori Marinella
series Journal of Pediatric and Neonatal Individualized Medicine
issn 2281-0692
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Background: Urinary proteins may help to understand the physiology and diagnose renal dysfunction in sick infants. The renal function in ill full-term newborns with disorders of early neonatal period by means of detecting specific protein biomarkers in the urine was studied. Materials and methods: A prospective cohort study on 205 full-term newborns was performed including 55 healthy infants, 55 newborns with clinical signs of moderate disorders of early neonatal period, 50 newborns with severe neonatal disorders without acute kidney injury (AKI), and 45 newborns with both severe neonatal disorders and AKI. The urinary concentrations of total protein (UTPr), albumin (UAlb), immunoglobulin G (UIgG), α1-microglobulin (Uα1-MG), and β2-microglobulin (Uβ2-MG) were determined by means of laboratory tests. Results: As compared to healthy newborns, full-term neonates with moderate disorders of early neonatal period developed dysfunction of the glomerular membrane (selective proteinuria with excessive excretion of UAlb), and proximal tubules (increased Uα1-MG). More severe neonatal disorders in term newborns are accompanied by selective proteinuria together with more pronounced tubular failure (excessive urinary excretion of Uα1-MG and Uβ2-MG). Formation of AKI in term infants is associated with complex disorders of all structural elements of the nephron, manifested by extremely high levels of total protein markers of glomerular (UTPr, UAlb and UIgG) and tubular (Uα1-MG and Uβ2-MG) dysfunction in urine. Conclusions: The measurement of urinary protein biomarkers in sick full-term newborns with clinical signs of disorders of early neonatal period demonstrated renal dysfunction not only in infants with AKI. The biochemical changes found in critically ill newborns require timely diagnosis promoting the right choice of intensive therapy with the aim to prevent the development of severe renal pathology and chronic renal failure in the future.
topic full-term newborn
renal dysfunction
acute kidney injury
urinary protein markers
url https://www.jpnim.com/index.php/jpnim/article/view/502
work_keys_str_mv AT juliyahodovanets urinaryproteinmarkersofrenaldysfunctioninfulltermnewbornswithdisordersofearlyneonatalperiod
AT anastasiyababintseva urinaryproteinmarkersofrenaldysfunctioninfulltermnewbornswithdisordersofearlyneonatalperiod
AT nicholastiborlongford urinaryproteinmarkersofrenaldysfunctioninfulltermnewbornswithdisordersofearlyneonatalperiod
AT ludmilaagafonova urinaryproteinmarkersofrenaldysfunctioninfulltermnewbornswithdisordersofearlyneonatalperiod
_version_ 1725107801012830208