Protein Information

ID 186
Name hemoglobin (protein family or complex)
Synonyms Hemoglobin; Hemoglobins

Compound Information

ID 1779
Name phosphorus
CAS phosphorus

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
20301083 Lomonte C, Derosa C, Vernaglione L, Casucci F, Losurdo N, Libutti P, Teutonico A, Basile C: Serum parathyroid hormone and phosphate influence the levels of circulating CD34+ cells in uremia. J Nephrol. 2010 Mar 18. pii: 8A13134E-146D-475D-8FDC-866EB2E16427.
Background: Parathyroid hormone (PTH) is an active stimulator of bone marrow osteoblasts; it is involved in the niche organization, ie the bone marrow microenvironment which controls the turnover and the fate of endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs). PTH stimulates EPC production; this action can be measured by counting the number of circulating CD34+ cells. Methods: This observational cross-sectional study aimed to verify this effect in 3 groups of hemodialysis patients with different serum PTH levels. The first group consisted of 11 patients affected by secondary hyperparathyroidism (SHPTH group, serum PTH levels > 500 pg/ml); the second group consisted of 10 patients with serum PTH levels between 150 and 500 pg/ml (TargetPTH group); the third group consisted of 10 patients with serum PTH levels below the treatment target after parathyroidectomy (PTx group, serum PTH levels <150 pg/ml). Serum PTH, calcium (Ca), phosphorus (P), alkaline phosphatases (ALP), urea nitrogen, albumin and hemoglobin were measured. Flow cytofluorimetry with CD45+ sequential gating was effected; therefore, CD34+ cells could be analyzed. Results: The SHPTH group showed significantly higher values of serum PTH, P and ALP (respectively, p <0.0001, p <0.033 and p <0.0001), and significantly lower values of circulating CD34+ cells (both in absolute and percent terms) in the SHPTH and in the TargetPTH groups (for both, p <0.0001). Two models of multiple regression analysis built with circulating CD34+ cells (expressed as percentage in the first one and as absolute values in the second one) as dependent variables showed that only serum PTH and P values were inversely associated with both. Conclusions: Our data suggest that an inverse relationship exists in uremic patients among circulating CD34+ cells and serum P and PTH levels. The count of circulating CD34+ cells might represent a novel biomarker for the assessment of the cardiovascular risk for dialysis patients.
6(0,0,1,1)