Heliyon (Oct 2024)
Mesoporous activated carbon derived from Chinese herbal medicine residues for hemoperfusion removal of uremia toxins from progressive chronic kidney diseases patients
Abstract
Hemoperfusion is one of the most important therapies for progressive chronic kidney disease (CKD) and is effective at removing toxins from the blood. Increasing the efficiency of adsorbents applied in hemoperfusion is crucial. In the present study, shell of areca nut, one of the most common waste Chinese herb medicine residue with a porous structure was carbonized and activated at different temperatures to obtain two kinds of porous materials. The biocompatibility of the as-prepared porous materials was estimated via a hemolytic test, and the removal efficiency of the materials toward toxins was tested via an adsorption experiment in solution and blood samples from CKD patients, simulated hemoperfusion and in vivo hemoperfusion. After 4 h of adsorption, free and protein-bound toxins in solution were efficiently removed by the prepared porous materials, and the removal efficiency was better than that of commonly used hemoperfutor adsorbents. Most of the tested toxins can be removed from CKD blood samples and simulated hemoperfusion samples. Blood uremic toxins from CKD mice were also efficiently and safely removed after in vivo hemoperfusion using the as-prepared adsorbent. This work highlights promising adsorbents for hemoperfusion that could increase the therapeutic efficacy in patients with progressive CKD.