Renal Replacement Therapy (Jun 2021)

Amelioration of hemodialysis-induced oxidative stress and fatigue with a hemodialysis system employing electrolyzed water containing molecular hydrogen

  • Hidehisa Satta,
  • Tamio Iwamoto,
  • Yuki Kawai,
  • Naoaki Koguchi,
  • Kazuhiko Shibata,
  • Nobuteru Kobayashi,
  • Mariko Yoshida,
  • Masaaki Nakayama

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s41100-021-00353-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Background A novel hemodialysis (HD) system employing electrolyzed water containing molecular hydrogen (E-HD) has been developed to improve the bio-compatibility of HD. This study examined the impact of E-HD on changes in redox state during HD and HD-related fatigue. Method This single-arm, prospective observational study examined 63 patients on chronic HD (41 males; mean age, 72 ± 9 years; median duration of HD, 7 years). Redox parameters (serum myeloperoxidase [MPO], malondialdehyde-protein adduct [MDA-a], thioredoxin 1 [TRX]) during HD were compared between control HD (C-HD) and E-HD after 8 weeks. Fatigue was evaluated using a numerical rating scale (NRS) during the 8-week course. Results In C-HD, an increase in serum MPO accompanied increases in both oxidative products (MDA-a) and anti-oxidant molecules (TRX). In E-HD, although increases in MPO were accentuated during HD, changes in MDA-a and TRX were ameliorated as compared with C-HD. In patients who showed HD-related fatigue (47%) during C-HD, change in MDA-a by HD was a risk factor for the presence of fatigue. During the 8 weeks of observation on E-HD, those patients displayed significant decreases in fatigue scores. Conclusion E-HD ameliorates oxidative stress and supports anti-oxidation during HD, suggesting improved bio-compatibility of the HD system. E-HD may benefit patients with HD-related fatigue, but the mechanisms underlying changes to oxidative stress have yet to be clarified.

Keywords