International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Jul 2024)

Leptin Is Associated with Testosterone, Nutritional Markers, and Vascular Muscular Dysfunction in Chronic Kidney Disease

  • Crina Claudia Rusu,
  • Ina Kacso,
  • Diana Moldovan,
  • Alina Potra,
  • Dacian Tirinescu,
  • Maria Ticala,
  • Remus Orasan,
  • Cristian Budurea,
  • Florin Anton,
  • Ana Valea,
  • Cosmina Ioana Bondor,
  • Mara Carsote

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms25147646
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 14
p. 7646

Abstract

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Chronic kidney disease (CKD) causes specific hormonal disturbances, such as variations in leptin and testosterone levels and function. These disturbances can promote errors in signaling interaction and cellular information processing and can be implicated in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. This study investigates the factors that affect leptin in CKD patients and examines how leptin is related to markers of vascular disease. We conducted a cross-sectional study of 162 patients with CKD in pre-dialysis and dialysis stages. We recorded clinical and laboratory data, including leptin, testosterone, and subclinical atherosclerosis markers like brachial–ankle pulse wave velocity (ba PWV) in pre-dialysis CKD patients and flow-mediated vasodilation (FMD) and nitroglycerin-mediated vasodilation (NMD) in hemodialysis (HD) patients. Leptin was significantly correlated with testosterone in CKD pre-dialysis stages (p p = 0.026), with adipose tissue mass in pre-dialysis stages (p p p = 0.039; r = −0.379); in all HD patients, leptin correlated with C reactive protein (p = 0.007; r = 0.28) and parathormone (p = 0.039; r = −0.220). Our research emphasizes the connection between leptin, adipose tissue, and testosterone in all stages of CKD. Leptin was associated with NMD in HD women and correlated with inflammatory syndrome and parathyroid hormone in all HD patients.

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