Vascular Calcification Mechanisms

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Vascular Calcification Mechanisms"

Transcription

1 REVIEWS J Am Soc Nephrol 15: , 2004 Vascular Calcification Mechanisms CECILIA M. GIACHELLI Bioengineering Department, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington. Abstract. Vascular calcification is highly correlated with cardiovascular disease mortality, especially in patients with ESRD or diabetes. In addition to the devastating effects of inappropriate biomineralization seen in cardiac valvulopathies, calciphylaxis, and idiopathic arterial calcification, vascular calcification is now recognized as a marker of atherosclerotic plaque burden as well as a major contributor to loss of arterial compliance and increased pulse pressure seen with age, diabetes, and renal insufficiency. In recent years, several mechanisms to explain vascular calcification have been identified including (1) loss of inhibition, (2) induction of bone formation, (3) circulating nucleational complexes, and (4) cell death. Alterations in calcium (Ca) and phosphorus (P) balance as seen in patients with ESRD promotes vascular calcification via multiple mechanisms and may explain the alarmingly high levels of cardiovascular disease deaths in these patients. Strategies to control Ca and P levels in patients with ESRD have met with early success in preventing progression of vascular calcification. Whether or not vascular calcification can be reversed is not yet known, but exciting new studies suggest that this may be possible in the future. Pathologic calcification of cardiovascular structures, or vascular calcification, is associated with a number of diseases including ESRD and cardiovascular disease. Calcium phosphate deposition, in the form of bioapatite, is the hallmark of vascular calcification and can occur in the blood vessels, myocardium, and cardiac valves. In blood vessels, calcified deposits are found in distinct layers of the blood vessel and are related to underlying pathology. Intimal calcification occurs in atherosclerotic lesions (1,2), whereas medial calcification (also known as Monckeberg s medial sclerosis) is associated with vascular stiffening and arteriosclerosis observed with age, diabetes, and ESRD (3,4). Intimal calcification may occur independently of medial calcification and vice versa. In patients with ESRD, a mixture of intimal and medial calcification has been observed in affected vessels (5,6). Correspondence to Dr. Cecilia M. Giachelli, Bioengineering Department, Box , University of Washington, Okanogan Lane, Bagley Hall, Seattle, WA Phone: ; Fax: ; ceci@u.washington.edu / Journal of the American Society of Nephrology Copyright 2004 by the American Society of Nephrology DOI: /01.ASN C4 Clinical Consequences of Vascular Calcification Vascular calcification can lead to devastating organ dysfunction depending on its extent and the organ affected. In the heart, calcification of cardiac valve leaflets is recognized as a major mode of failure of native as well as bioprosthetic valves (7,8). In dialysis patients, vascular medial calcification is responsible for calcific uremic arteriolopathy, a necrotizing skin condition associated with extremely high mortality rates (9). Finally, a genetic deficiency in pyrophosphate levels causes idiopathic infantile arterial calcification, a disease characterized by arterial calcification, fibrosis, and stenosis that leads to premature death in affected neonates (10). In contrast, calcification of blood vessels commonly seen with aging, ESRD, diabetes, and atherosclerosis has historically been considered a benign finding. However, the introduction of new techniques to measure vascular calcification noninvasively, such as electron beam computed tomography, have revolutionized our current thinking about the risks of vascular calcification. In coronary arteries, calcification is positively correlated with atherosclerotic plaque burden (11,12), increased risk of myocardial infarction (13 15), and plaque instability (2,16). Although some of these findings may relate to the correlation of coronary calcification with extent of underlying atherosclerotic disease, it is also possible that vascular calcification itself may contribute to initiation or progression of cardiovascular disease (CVD). This possibility seems particularly plausible in the case of coronary calcification associated with ESRD (see below). Finally, vascular calcification, especially that found in the media of large arteries, leads to increased stiffening and therefore decreased compliance of these vessels. The consequent loss of the important cushioning function of these arteries is associated with increased arterial pulse wave velocity and pulse pressure, and leads to impaired arterial distensibility, increased afterload favoring left ventricular hypertrophy, and compromised coronary perfusion (17,18). Indeed, medial arterial calcification is strongly correlated with coronary artery disease and future cardiovascular events in patients with type 1 (19,20) and is a strong prognostic marker of CVD mortality in patients with ESRD (21). Thus, vascular calcification has a profound influence on cardiovascular function and health. Cardiovascular Calcification and CVD Mortality in ESRD More than half the deaths in patients with ESRD are due to CVD. In fact, the risk of CVD mortality in adult patients with ESRD is 20 to 30 times higher than that of the general popu-

2 2960 Journal of the American Society of Nephrology J Am Soc Nephrol 15: , 2004 lation (22). Growing evidence suggests that this increased risk of CVD mortality may be partly explained by the predisposition of this population to vascular calcification. Hyperphosphatemia and elevated Ca P ion product (Ca P; prevalent in patients with ESRD) promote vascular calcification, and are significantly linked to all cause and CVD mortality in patients with ESRD (23). In a landmark study, Goodman et al. (24) found that coronary artery calcification occurred in young patients with ESRD decades before this pathology was observed in the normal population. Furthermore, progression of vascular calcification in this group was positively correlated with serum P levels, Ca P, and daily intake of Ca (24). Similar findings were observed by Eifinger et al. (25) as well as Oh et al. (26) in young adults with childhood-onset ESRD. In addition, Raggi et al. (27) found that coronary artery calcification was very common and severe in adult hemodialysis patients, and significantly correlated with ischemic CVD. Again, calcification was highly correlated with elevated serum Ca and P levels. Finally, arterial medial calcification, a strong prognostic marker for CVD mortality in patients with ESRD, was also associated with elevated serum Ca, P, Ca P, and prescribed Ca intake (18,21). Thus derangements in Ca and P balance are now considered major nontraditional risk factors for CVD in ESRD. Mechanisms of Vascular Calcification Vascular calcification is currently considered an actively regulated process that may arise by several different, non mutually exclusive mechanisms (28). As shown in Figure 1, four different mechanisms for initiating vascular calcification have been proposed. First, human and mouse genetic findings have determined that blood vessels normally express inhibitors of mineralization, such as pyrophosphate and matrix gla protein, respectively, and that lack of these molecules ( loss of inhibition ) leads to spontaneous vascular calcification and increased mortality (10,29). Likewise, fetuin/ 2-HS-glycoprotein is a major inhibitor of apatite found in the circulation, and decreased fetuin levels have recently been correlated with elevated CVD mortality in hemodialysis patients (30). Second, the presence of bone proteins such as osteopontin (31), osteocalcin (32), and BMP2 (33), matrix vesicles (34), and outright bone and cartilage formation in calcified vascular lesions (1,35) has suggested that osteogenic mechanisms may also play a role in vascular calcification. Indeed, cells derived from the vascular media undergo bone- and cartilage-like phenotypic change and calcification in vitro under various conditions, and is discussed in further detail below (36 40). Third, bone turnover leading to release of circulating nucleational complexes has been proposed to explain the link between vascular calcification and osteoporosis in postmenopausal women (41 43). Fourth, cell death can provide phospholipidrich membranous debris and apoptotic bodies that may serve to nucleate apatite, especially in diseases where necrosis and apoptosis are prevalent, such as atherosclerosis (34,44,45). Finally, via thermodynamic mechanisms (sometimes referred to as passive mechanisms), elevated Ca, P, and Ca P promote apatite nucleation and crystal growth and would be expected to exacerbate vascular calcification initiated by any of the other mechanisms described above. Furthermore, new evidence suggests that Ca and P may additionally have direct effects on vascular cells that predispose to mineralization, as described below. Roles of Ca and P in Vascular Smooth Muscle Cell Mineralization As indicated above, elevated serum P, Ca, and increased Ca burden are correlated with vascular calcification and cardiovascular mortality in patients with ESRD. To determine whether elevated Ca or P directly affect cell-mediated regulation of vascular calcification, we and others have made use of vascular smooth muscle cell culture systems. Increasing inorganic P in the culture media to those seen in hyperphosphatemia ( 2.4 mm) leads to deposition of apatite into the extracellular matrix surroundings the cells (37,46 48). Concomitant with mineralization, the cells undergo a phenotypic change characterized by loss of smooth muscle specific gene expression and upregulation of genes commonly associated with bone differentiation including osteocalcin, osteopontin and Runx2. Similar phenotypic changes have also been observed in vivo in human as well as animal models of vascular calcification (46,49,50). Elevated P-induced phenotypic transition and mineralization were shown to be dependent on a sodium-dependent phosphate cotransporter, Pit-1, on the basis of their ability to be inhibited by phosphonoformic acid (37) and Pit-1 specific small interfering RNA (Giachelli and Li, unpublished data). These data confirm the importance of inorganic P as a signaling molecule with the ability to initiate both phenotypic change and mineralization in vascular smooth muscle cells. Likewise, elevating Ca levels in the culture media to levels considered hypercalcemic ( 2.6 mm) leads to enhanced mineralization and phenotypic transition of vascular smooth muscle cells (51). Elevated calcium-induced mineralization was also dependent on the function of a sodium-dependent phosphate cotransporter. Although elevated Ca did not appear to increase P uptake acutely, prolonged exposure of smooth muscle cell cultures to elevated Ca induced Pit-1 mrna levels, suggesting that elevated Ca regulates P sensitivity of vascular smooth muscle cells. These findings were recently confirmed and extended by Proudfoot et al. (52). In those studies, elevated Ca (1.8 to 5.0 mm) stimulated human smooth muscle cell calcification in vitro. Furthermore, elevated Ca levels stimulated release of mineralization-competent matrix vesicles from human smooth muscle cells, and diltiazem and BAPTA, both inhibitors of intracellular Ca influx, blocked smooth muscle cell mineralization. A rise in intracellular Ca was also associated with altered alkaline phosphatase, decreased matrix Gla protein (MGP), and increased fetuin levels. Together with our own, these findings confirm that elevated Ca has pro-mineralizing effects beyond simply raising the Ca P, and regulates multiple systems in smooth muscle cells that promote susceptibility to matrix mineralization. A diagram summarizing the possible roles of elevated Ca and P on vascular smooth muscle calcification is shown in Figure 2.

3 J Am Soc Nephrol 15: , 2004 Vascular Calcification 2961 Figure 1. Schematic illustrating four, non mutually exclusive theories for vascular calcification: (1) loss of inhibition as a result of deficiency of constitutively expressed tissue-derived and circulating mineralization inhibitors leads to default apatite deposition, (2) induction of bone formation resulting from altered differentiation of vascular smooth muscle or stem cells (3), circulating nucleational complexes released from actively remodeling bone, and (4) cell death leading to release of apoptotic bodies and/or necrotic debris that may serve to nucleate apatite at sites of injury. Figure reprinted from (28) with permission from Elsevier. Can Vascular Calcification Be Controlled? Several recent studies suggest that vascular calcification may be slowed, and potentially even reversed, in humans as well as experimental animal models. In light of the findings that elevated serum P and Ca are strongly correlated with vascular calcification and CVD mortality in ESRD, an emphasis has been placed on the use of non Ca-containing P binders, such as sevelamer, to treat hyperphosphatemia in these patients Figure 2. Proposed model for the effects of elevated Ca and P on vascular smooth muscle cell (SMC) matrix mineralization. Elevated Ca and P are proposed to stimulate vascular matrix mineralization in two ways. First, both Ca and P increase the activity of Pit-1: elevated P stimulates P uptake via Pit-1, and elevated Ca induces expression of Pit-1 mrna. Both mechanisms are proposed to enhance P uptake into SMC as well as matrix vesicles. Elevated intracellular P than leads to SMC phenotypic modulation, which includes upregulation of osteogenic genes (Runx2, osteocalcin, and alkaline phosphatase), and generation of a mineralization-competent extracellular matrix. In addition, increased Pit-1 in matrix vesicles promotes P loading of matrix vesicles, promoting nucleation of mineral within the extracellular matrix. Second, elevated Ca and/or P lead to increased Ca P ion product, thereby promoting growth of apatite crystals in the matrix via thermodynamic mechanisms.

4 2962 Journal of the American Society of Nephrology J Am Soc Nephrol 15: , 2004 (53). Indeed, when sevelamer was compared to commonly used Ca-based P binders in a large hemodialysis patient group it was found that patients receiving sevelamer had unchanged median coronary artery and aorta calcification scores after 1 yr as opposed to Ca-treated patients whose arterial calcification scores increased 28% over baseline (12). Significantly, although both treatments controlled P levels equivalently, treatment with Ca containing binders led to an increased frequency of hypercalcemic episodes and greater suppression of serum parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels in hemodialysis patients (54,55). Similar effects of sevelamer were also noted in a rat uremia model, where renal calcification was greatly reduced compared to Ca carbonate treatment (56). Thus, decreasing Ca and P burdens appear to be beneficial in blocking vascular calcification. Antihypertensive agents have also been implicated in control of vascular calcification. In a clinical study, the Ca channel blocker nifedipine slowed progression of coronary calcification in hypertensive patients compared to diuretics (57). Moreover, Moreau s group has developed a novel animal model of isolated systolic hypertension that is caused by arterial calcification (58,59). In this model, rats are treated with warfarin and vitamin K and this leads to calcification of the aortic wall and isolated systolic hypertension. Treatment with an endothelin (ET-1) receptor antagonist or angiotensin II blocker prevents increases in pulse pressure as well as calcification of the vessels. Remarkably, treatment of rats with ET-1 antagonist after calcification was established caused regression of vascular calcification and normalization of pulse pressure. These data support the idea that calcification of compliance vessels leads to hypertensive effects, especially increased pulse pressure as a result of increased stiffness, and identify ET-1 antagonists as major regulators of vascular calcification. Furthermore, these data suggest that regression of vascular calcification can occur and is actively regulated. Indeed, evidence for regression of coronary calcification in humans has also been obtained. In a study of 102 symptomatic patients with coronary calcification currently being treated with standard medications, 15% of patients showed evidence of regression on the basis of electron beam computed tomography calcium scores measured at baseline and approximately 6 mo later (60). Conclusions Vascular calcification is highly correlated with CVD morbidity and mortality, especially in high-risk populations such patients with ESRD or diabetes. Four non mutually exclusive mechanisms for vascular calcification are emerging, including (1) loss of inhibition, (2) induction of bone formation, (3) circulating nucleational complexes, and (4) cell death. Derangements in Ca and P metabolism effect all of these mechanisms by elevating the Ca P, and also by direct effects on smooth muscle cells that promote bonelike differentiation. The challenge remains to understand which mechanisms are active and/or predominate under various disease states, and to develop effective therapeutic strategies that may prevent and potentially reverse vascular calcification. Acknowledgments Dr. Giachelli s research is supported by NIH grants HL62329, AR48798, NSF grant EEC , and a grant from Genzyme. References 1. Hunt JL, Fairman R, Mitchell ME, Carpenter JP, Golden M, Khalapyan T, Wolfe M, Neschis D, Milner R, Scoll B, Cusack A, Mohler ER 3rd: Bone formation in carotid plaques: A clinicopathological study. Stroke 33: , Burke AP, Taylor A, Farb A, Malcom GT, Virmani R: Coronary calcification: Insights from sudden coronary death victims. Z Kardiol, 89[Suppl 2]: 49 53, Monckeberg JG: Uber die reine mediaverkalkung der extremitaten-arteries und ihr Verhalten zur arteriosklerose. Virchows Arch 171: , Edmonds ME, Morrison N, Laws JW, Watkins PJ: Medial arterial calcification and diabetic neuropathy. Br Med J Clin Res Ed 284(6320): , Schwarz U, Buzello M, Ritz E, Stein G, Raabe G, Wiest G, Mall G, Amann K: Morphology of coronary atherosclerotic lesions in patients with end-stage renal failure. Nephrol Dial Transplant 15: , Ibels LS, Alfrey AC, Huffer WE, Craswell PW, Anderson JT, Weil R, 3rd: Arterial calcification and pathology in uremic patients undergoing dialysis. Am J Med 66: , Schoen FJ, Levy RJ: Founder s Award, 25th Annual Meeting of the Society for Biomaterials, perspectives. Providence, RI, April 28 May 2, Tissue heart valves: Current challenges and future research perspectives. J Biomed Mater Res 47: , O Keefe JH, Lavie CJ, Nishimura RA, Edwards WD: Degenerative aortic stenosis. One effect of the graying of America. Postgrad Med 89: , Coates T, Kirkland GS, Dymock RB, Murphy BF, Brealey JK, Mathew TH, Disney AP: Cutaneous necrosis from calcific uremic arteriolopathy. Am J Kidney Dis 32: , Rutsch F, Ruf N, Vaingankar S, Toliat MR, Suk A, Hohne W, Schauer G, Lehmann M, Roscioli T, Schnabel D, Epplen JT, Knisely A, Superti-Furga A, McGill J, Filippone M, Sinaiko AR, Vallance H, Hinrichs B, Smith W, Ferre M, Terkeltaub R, Nurnberg P: Mutations in ENPP1 are associated with idiopathic infantile arterial calcification. Nat Genet 34: , Rumberger JA, Simons DB, Fitzpatrick LA, Sheedy PF, Schwartz RS: Coronary artery calcium area by electron-beam computed tomography and coronary atherosclerotic plaque area: A histopathologic correlative study. Circulation 92: , Sangiorgi G, Rumberger JA, Severson A, Edwards WD, Gregoire J, Fitzpatrick LA, Schwartz RS: Arterial calcification and not lumen stenosis is highly correlated with atherosclerotic plaque burden in humans: A histologic study of 723 coronary artery segments using nondecalcifying methodology. J Am Coll Cardiol 31: , Beadenkopf WG, Daoud AS, Love BM: Calcification in the coronary arteries and its relationship to arteriosclerosis and myocardial infarction. Am J Roentgenol 92: , Locker TH, Schwartz RS, Cotta CW, Hickman JR: Fluoroscopic coronary artery calcification and asociated coronary disease in asymptomatic young men. J Am Coll Cardiol 19: , 1992

5 J Am Soc Nephrol 15: , 2004 Vascular Calcification Puentes G, Detrano R, Tang W, Wong N, French W, Narahara K, Brundage B, Baksheshi H: Estimation of coronary calcium mass using electron beam computed tomography: A promising approach for predicting coronary events? Circulation 92: I313, Fitzgerald PJ, Ports TA, Yock PG: Contribution of localized calcium deposits to dissection after angioplasty: An observational study using intravascular ultrasound. Circulation 86: 64 70, Marchais SJ, Guerin AP, London GM: Arterial calcinosis, chronic renal failure and calcium antagonism. Drugs 44[Suppl 1]: , Guerin AP, London GM, Marchais SJ, Metivier F: Arterial stiffening and vascular calcifications in end-stage renal disease. Nephrol Dial Transplant 15: , Olson JC, Edmundowicz D, Becker DJ, Kuller LH, Orchard TJ: Coronary calcium in adults with type 1 diabetes: A stronger correlate of clinical coronary artery disease in men than in women. Diabetes 49: , Lehto S, Niskanen L, Suhonen L, Ronnemaa T, Laakso M: Medial artery calcification. A neglected harbinger of cardiovascular complications in non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol 16: , London GM, Guerin AP, Marchais SJ, Metivier F, Pannier B, Adda H: Arterial media calcification in end-stage renal disease: Impact on all-cause and cardiovascular mortality. Nephrol Dial Transplant 18: , Foley RN, Parfrey PS: Cardiovascular disease and mortality in ESRD. J Nephrol 11: , Block GA: Prevalence and clinical consequences of elevated Ca P product in hemodialysis patients. Clin Nephrol 54: , Goodman WG, Goldin J, Kuizon BD, Yoon C, Gales B, Sider D, Wang Y, Chung J, Emerick A, Greaser L, Elashoff RM, Salusky IB: Coronary-artery calcification in young adults with end-stage renal disease who are undergoing dialysis. N Engl J Med 342: , Eifinger F, Wahn F, Querfeld U, Pollok M, Gevargez A, Kriener P, Gronemeyer D: Coronary artery calcifications in children and young adults treated with renal replacement therapy. Nephrol Dial Transplant 15: , Oh J, Wunsch R, Turzer M, Bahner M, Raggi P, Querfeld U, Mehls O, Schaefer F: Advanced coronary and carotid arteriopathy in young adults with childhood-onset chronic renal failure. Circulation 106: , Raggi P, Boulay A, Chasan-Taber S, Amin N, Dillon M, Burke SK, Chertow GM: Cardiac calcification in adult hemodialysis patients. A link between end-stage renal disease and cardiovascular disease? J Am Coll Cardiol 39: , Speer MY, Giachelli CM: Regulation of cardiovascular calcification. Cardiovasc Pathol 13: 63 70, Luo G DP, McKee MD, Pinero GJ, Loyer E, Behringer RR, and G Karsenty: Spontaneous calcification of arteries and cartilage in mice lacking matrix GLA protein. Nature 386(March 6): 78 81, Ketteler M, Bongartz P, Westenfeld R, Wildberger JE, Mahnken AH, Bohm R, Metzger T, Wanner C, Jahnen-Dechent W, Floege J: Association of low fetuin-a (AHSG) concentrations in serum with cardiovascular mortality in patients on dialysis: A crosssectional study. Lancet 361(9360): , Giachelli CM, Bae N, Almeida M, Denhardt DT, Alpers CE, Schwartz SM: Osteopontin is elevated during neointima formation in rat arteries and is a novel component of human atherosclerotic plaques. J Clin Invest 92: , Levy RJ, Schoen FJ, Levy JT, Nelson AC, Howard SL, Oshry LJ: Biologic determinants of dystrophic calcification and osteocalcin deposition in glutaraldehyde-preserved porcine aortic valve leaflets implanted subcutaneously in rats. Am J Pathol 113: , Bostrom K, Watson KE, Horn S, Wortham C, Herman IM, Demer LL: Bone morphogenic protein expression in human atherosclerotic lesions. J Clin Invest 91: , Tanimura A, McGregor DH, Anderson HC: Matrix vesicles in atherosclerotic calcification. Proc Soc Exp Biol Med 172: , Mohler ER 3rd, Gannon F, Reynolds C, Zimmerman R, Keane MG, Kaplan FS: Bone formation and inflammation in cardiac valves. Circulation 103: , Jono S, Nishizawa Y, Shioi A, Morii H: 1,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D3 increases in vitro vascular calcification by modulating secretion of endogenous parathyroid hormone-related peptide. Circulation 98: , Jono S, McKee MD, Murry CE, Shioi A, Nishizawa Y, Mori K, Morii H, Giachelli CM: Phosphate regulation of vascular smooth muscle cell calcification. Circ Res 87: E10 E17, Parhami F, Basseri B, Hwang J, Tintut Y, Demer LL: Highdensity lipoprotein regulates calcification of vascular cells. Circ Res 91: , Tintut Y, Parhami F, Bostrom K, Jackson SM, Demer LL: camp stimulates osteoblast-like differentiation of calcifying vascular cells: Potential signaling pathway for vascular calcification. J Biol Chem 273: , Tintut Y, Patel J, Parhami F, Demer LL: Tumor necrosis factoralpha promotes in vitro calcification of vascular cells via the camp pathway. Circulation 102: , Price PA, Caputo JM, Williamson MK: Bone origin of the serum complex of calcium, phosphate, fetuin, and matrix Gla protein: Biochemical evidence for the cancellous bone-remodeling compartment. J Bone Miner Res 17: , Price PA, Faus SA, Williamson MK: Bisphosphonates alendronate and ibandronate inhibit artery calcification at doses comparable to those that inhibit bone resorption. Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol 21: , Price PA, June HH, Buckley JR, Williamson MK: Osteoprotegerin inhibits artery calcification induced by warfarin and by vitamin D. Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol 21: , Proudfoot D, Skepper JN, Hegyi L, Bennett MR, Shanahan CM, Weissberg PL: Apoptosis regulates human vascular calcification in vitro: Evidence for initiation of vascular calcification by apoptotic bodies. Circ Res 87: , Schoen FJ, Tsao JW, Levy RJ: Calcification of bovine pericardium used in cardiac valve bioprostheses. Am J Pathol 123: , Steitz SA, Speer MY, Curinga G, Yang HY, Haynes P, Aebersold R, Schinke T, Karsenty G, Giachelli CM: Smooth muscle cell phenotypic transition associated with calcification: Upregulation of Cbfa1 and downregulation of smooth muscle lineage markers. Circ Res 89: , Wada T, McKee MD, Stietz S, Giachelli CM: Calcification of vascular smooth muscle cell cultures: Inhibition by osteopontin. Circ Res 84: 1 6, Chen NX, O Neill KD, Duan D, Moe SM: Phosphorus and uremic serum up-regulate osteopontin expression in vascular smooth muscle cells. Kidney Int 62: , 2002

6 2964 Journal of the American Society of Nephrology J Am Soc Nephrol 15: , Moe SM, Duan D, Doehle BP, O Neill KD, Chen NX: Uremia induces the osteoblast differentiation factor Cbfa1 in human blood vessels. Kidney Int 63: , Moe SM, O Neill KD, Duan D, Ahmed S, Chen NX, Leapman SB, Fineberg N, Kopecky K: Medial artery calcification in ESRD patients is associated with deposition of bone matrix proteins. Kidney Int 61: , Yang H, Curinga G, Giachelli CM: Elevated extracellular calcium levels induce smooth muscle cell matrix mineralization in vitro. Kidney Int, 2004, in press 52. Proudfoot D, Skepper JN, McNair R, Johannides A, Weissberg PL, Shanahan CM: MIneral ion-induced release of mineralization-competent matrix vesicles from human vascular smooth muscle cells. Cardiovasc Pathol 13[3 Suppl]: S186, Chertow GM: Slowing the progression of vascular calcification in hemodialysis. J Am Soc Nephrol 14[9 Suppl 4]: S310 S314, Chertow GM, Burke SK, Raggi P: Sevelamer attenuates the progression of coronary and aortic calcification in hemodialysis patients. Kidney Int 62: , Chertow GM, Raggi P, McCarthy JT, Schulman G, Silberzweig J, Kuhlik A, Goodman WG, Boulay A, Burke SK, Toto RD: The effects of sevelamer and calcium acetate on proxies of atherosclerotic and arteriosclerotic vascular disease in hemodialysis patients. Am J Nephrol 23: , Cozzolino M, Dusso AS, Liapis H, Finch J, Lu Y, Burke SK, Slatopolsky E: The effects of sevelamer hydrochloride and calcium carbonate on kidney calcification in uremic rats. JAmSoc Nephrol 13: , Motro M, Shemesh J: Calcium channel blocker nifedipine slows down progression of coronary calcification in hypertensive patients compared with diuretics. Hypertension 37: , Essalihi R, Dao HH, Yamaguchi N, Moreau P: A new model of isolated systolic hypertension induced by chronic warfarin and vitamin K(1) treatment. Am J Hypertens 16: , Dao HH, Essalihi R, Graillon JF, Lariviere R, De Champlain J, Moreau P: Pharmacological prevention and regression of arterial remodeling in a rat model of isolated systolic hypertension. J Hypertens 20: , Schmermund A, Baumgart D, Mohlenkamp S, Kriener P, Pump H, Gronemeyer D, Seibel R, Erbel R: Natural history and topographic pattern of progression of coronary calcification in symptomatic patients: An electron-beam CT study. Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol 21: , 2001

Improved Assessment of Aortic Calcification in Japanese Patients Undergoing Maintenance Hemodialysis

Improved Assessment of Aortic Calcification in Japanese Patients Undergoing Maintenance Hemodialysis ORIGINAL ARTICLE Improved Assessment of Aortic Calcification in Japanese Patients Undergoing Maintenance Hemodialysis Masaki Ohya 1, Haruhisa Otani 2,KeigoKimura 3, Yasushi Saika 4, Ryoichi Fujii 4, Susumu

More information

Vascular calcification in stage 5 Chronic Kidney Disease patients on dialysis

Vascular calcification in stage 5 Chronic Kidney Disease patients on dialysis Vascular calcification in stage 5 Chronic Kidney Disease patients on dialysis Seoung Woo Lee Div. Of Nephrology and Hypertension, Dept. of Internal Medicine, Inha Unv. College of Medicine, Inchon, Korea

More information

Vascular Calcification in Chronic Kidney Disease

Vascular Calcification in Chronic Kidney Disease Vascular Calcification in Chronic Kidney Disease By Neal X. Chen and Sharon M. Moe Dialysis patients have increased cardiovascular morbidity, mortality, and vascular calcification, and the latter appears

More information

Effects of Kidney Disease on Cardiovascular Morbidity and Mortality

Effects of Kidney Disease on Cardiovascular Morbidity and Mortality Effects of Kidney Disease on Cardiovascular Morbidity and Mortality Joachim H. Ix, MD, MAS Assistant Professor in Residence Division of Nephrology University of California San Diego, and Veterans Affairs

More information

Cardiovascular Mortality: General Population vs ESRD Dialysis Patients

Cardiovascular Mortality: General Population vs ESRD Dialysis Patients Cardiovascular Mortality: General Population vs ESRD Dialysis Patients Annual CVD Mortality (%) 100 10 1 0.1 0.01 0.001 25-34 35-44 45-54 55-64 66-74 75-84 >85 Age (years) GP Male GP Female GP Black GP

More information

Stefanos K. Roumeliotis. Department of Nephrology, Medical School Democritus University of Thrace, Alexandroupolis, Greece. Stefanos K.

Stefanos K. Roumeliotis. Department of Nephrology, Medical School Democritus University of Thrace, Alexandroupolis, Greece. Stefanos K. Department of Nephrology, Medical School Democritus University of Thrace, Alexandroupolis, Greece Passive, degenerative accumulation process of Ca ++ /P +++ without treatment options Active, complex, condition:

More information

The impact of improved phosphorus control: use of sevelamer hydrochloride in patients with chronic renal failure

The impact of improved phosphorus control: use of sevelamer hydrochloride in patients with chronic renal failure Nephrol Dial Transplant (2002) 17: 340 345 The impact of improved phosphorus control: use of sevelamer hydrochloride in patients with chronic renal failure Naseem Amin Genzyme Corporation, Cambridge, MA,

More information

Left ventricular hypertrophy: why does it happen?

Left ventricular hypertrophy: why does it happen? Nephrol Dial Transplant (2003) 18 [Suppl 8]: viii2 viii6 DOI: 10.1093/ndt/gfg1083 Left ventricular hypertrophy: why does it happen? Gerard M. London Department of Nephrology and Dialysis, Manhes Hospital,

More information

Molecular Mechanisms of Vascular Calcification

Molecular Mechanisms of Vascular Calcification Molecular Mechanisms of Vascular Calcification Catherine Shanahan, PhD Cardiovascular Division, King s College London, UK ESC, Munich, August 2012 CONFLICTS OF INTEREST: NONE TO DECLARE Vascular smooth

More information

J Am Soc Nephrol 15: , 2004

J Am Soc Nephrol 15: , 2004 J Am Soc Nephrol 15: 770 779, 2004 Calcium, Phosphate, and Parathyroid Hormone Levels in Combination and as a Function of Dialysis Duration Predict Mortality: Evidence for the Complexity of the Association

More information

Declaration of conflict of interest

Declaration of conflict of interest Declaration of conflict of interest Inhibitors of vascular calcification what have we learned from animal models Ralf Westenfeld Department of Cardiology Heinrich-Heine-University Düsseldorf Do you know

More information

J Am Soc Nephrol 15: , 2004

J Am Soc Nephrol 15: , 2004 J Am Soc Nephrol 15: 2857 2867, 2004 Human Vascular Smooth Muscle Cells Undergo Vesicle- Mediated Calcification in Response to Changes in Extracellular Calcium and Phosphate Concentrations: A Potential

More information

Reviews. This Review is part of a thematic series on Mechanisms of Vascular Calcification, which includes the following articles:

Reviews. This Review is part of a thematic series on Mechanisms of Vascular Calcification, which includes the following articles: Reviews This Review is part of a thematic series on Mechanisms of Vascular Calcification, which includes the following articles: Pathophysiology of Vascular Calcification in Chronic Kidney Disease Angiogenesis

More information

Coronary artery calcification and aortic pulse wave velocity in chronic kidney disease patients

Coronary artery calcification and aortic pulse wave velocity in chronic kidney disease patients Kidney International, Vol. 65 (2004), pp. 1790 1794 Coronary artery calcification and aortic pulse wave velocity in chronic kidney disease patients ALI A. HAYDAR, ADRIAN COVIC, HELEN COLHOUN, MICHAEL RUBENS,

More information

Original epidemiologic studies 1 have suggested that approximately

Original epidemiologic studies 1 have suggested that approximately Factors for Increased Morbidity and Mortality in Uremia: Hyperphosphatemia Nathan W. Levin, Frank A. Gotch, and Martin K. Kuhlmann Hyperphosphatemia is a metabolic abnormality present in the majority of

More information

Bone Markers and Vascular Calcification in CKD-MBD

Bone Markers and Vascular Calcification in CKD-MBD Bone Markers and Vascular Calcification in CKD-MBD Pierre Delanaye, MD, PhD Department of Nephrology, Dialysis, Transplantation CHU Sart Tilman University of Liège BELGIUM Bone Markers and Vascular Calcification

More information

Matrix Gla protein is associated with coronary artery calcification as assessed by electron-beam computed tomography

Matrix Gla protein is associated with coronary artery calcification as assessed by electron-beam computed tomography 2004 Schattauer GmbH, Stuttgart Cell Signaling and Vessel Remodeling Matrix Gla protein is associated with coronary artery calcification as assessed by electron-beam computed tomography Shuichi Jono 1,Yuji

More information

Phosphate-Induced Rat Vascular Smooth Muscle Cell Calcification and the Implication of Zinc Deficiency in A7r5 Cell Viability

Phosphate-Induced Rat Vascular Smooth Muscle Cell Calcification and the Implication of Zinc Deficiency in A7r5 Cell Viability Prev. Nutr. Food Sci. 2013;18(2):92-97 http://dx.doi.org/10.3746/pnf.2013.18.2.092 pissn 2287-1098 ㆍ eissn 2287-8602 Phosphate-Induced Rat Vascular Smooth Muscle Cell Calcification and the Implication

More information

Two major types of arterial calcification have been observed

Two major types of arterial calcification have been observed The Elastic Lamellae of Devitalized Arteries Calcify When Incubated in Serum Evidence for a Serum Calcification Factor Paul A. Price, Wai Si Chan, Dawn M. Jolson, Matthew K. Williamson Downloaded from

More information

Serum Phosphorus level: A marker of myocardial infarction

Serum Phosphorus level: A marker of myocardial infarction Neha Sheth and H.B Sirajwala / International Journal of Biomedical Research 217; 8(11): 618-622. 618 International Journal of Biomedical Research ISSN: 976-9633 (Online); 2455-566 (Print) Journal DOI:

More information

Hyperphosphatemia is associated with a

Hyperphosphatemia is associated with a TREATMENT OPTIONS IN THE MANAGEMENT OF PHOSPHATE RETENTION * George A. Porter, MD, FACP, and Hartmut H. Malluche, MD, FACP ABSTRACT Hyperphosphatemia is an independent risk factor for mortality and cardiovascular

More information

FOCUS ON CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE

FOCUS ON CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE The Consequences of Vitamin D Deficiency: FOCUS ON CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE Vitamin D deficiency is a global health problem. With all the medical advances of the century, vitamin D deficiency is still epidemic.

More information

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) and the

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) and the BONE COPLICATIONS AND CALCIFICATION OF SOFT TISSUES IN CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASE * John P. iddleton, D, and Hartmut H. alluche, D, FACP ABSTRACT Hyperphosphatemia is an independent risk factor for mortality

More information

Cardiovascular Disease in CKD. Parham Eftekhari, D.O., M.Sc. Assistant Clinical Professor Medicine NSUCOM / Broward General Medical Center

Cardiovascular Disease in CKD. Parham Eftekhari, D.O., M.Sc. Assistant Clinical Professor Medicine NSUCOM / Broward General Medical Center Cardiovascular Disease in CKD Parham Eftekhari, D.O., M.Sc. Assistant Clinical Professor Medicine NSUCOM / Broward General Medical Center Objectives Describe prevalence for cardiovascular disease in CKD

More information

Slowing the Progression of Vascular Calcification in Hemodialysis

Slowing the Progression of Vascular Calcification in Hemodialysis Slowing the Progression of Vascular Calcification in Hemodialysis J Am Soc Nephrol 14: S310 S314, 2003 GLENN M. CHERTOW Division of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, University of California San Francisco,

More information

The CARI Guidelines Caring for Australasians with Renal Impairment. Serum phosphate GUIDELINES

The CARI Guidelines Caring for Australasians with Renal Impairment. Serum phosphate GUIDELINES Date written: August 2005 Final submission: October 2005 Author: Carmel Hawley Serum phosphate GUIDELINES No recommendations possible based on Level I or II evidence SUGGESTIONS FOR CLINICAL CARE (Suggestions

More information

C ardiovascular disease (CVD) and stroke are the main causes of morbidity and

C ardiovascular disease (CVD) and stroke are the main causes of morbidity and Original Article DOI: 10.22088/cjim.9.4.347 Risk factors associated with aortic calcification in hemodialysis patients Alireza PeyroShabani 1 Mehrdad Nabahati (MD) 2, 3 MohammadAli Saber Sadeghdoust (MD)

More information

IS PVR THE RIGHT METRIC FOR RV AFTERLOAD?

IS PVR THE RIGHT METRIC FOR RV AFTERLOAD? Echo Doppler Assessment of PVR The Children s Hospital Denver, CO Robin Shandas Professor of Pediatrics, Cardiology Professor of Mechanical Engineering Director, Center for Bioengineering University of

More information

A simple score predicts future cardiovascular events in an inception cohort of dialysis patients

A simple score predicts future cardiovascular events in an inception cohort of dialysis patients http://www.kidney-international.org & 2006 International Society of Nephrology original article A simple score predicts future cardiovascular events in an inception cohort of dialysis patients JP Schwaiger,

More information

The emerging role of phosphate in vascular calcification

The emerging role of phosphate in vascular calcification translational nephrology http://www.kidney-international.org & 2009 International Society of Nephrology The emerging role of phosphate in vascular calcification Cecilia M. Giachelli 1 1 Department of Bioengineering,

More information

Structural abnormalities of the heart and vascular system in CKD & Dialysis - Thick but weak

Structural abnormalities of the heart and vascular system in CKD & Dialysis - Thick but weak Structural abnormalities of the heart and vascular system in CKD & Dialysis - Thick but weak Kerstin Amann Nephropathology, Dept. of Pathology, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg Krankenhausstr. 8-10 91054

More information

Role of Phosphorus and Vitamin D Analogs in the Pathogenesis of Vascular Calcification

Role of Phosphorus and Vitamin D Analogs in the Pathogenesis of Vascular Calcification 0022-3565/06/3181-90 98$20.00 THE JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY AND EXPERIMENTAL THERAPEUTICS Vol. 318, No. 1 Copyright 2006 by The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics 101261/3120671

More information

Cardiovascular mortality is up to 20 times more common

Cardiovascular mortality is up to 20 times more common Impact of Cardiovascular Calcification in Nondialyzed Patients after 24 Months of Follow-up Renato Watanabe, Marcelo M. Lemos, Silvia R. Manfredi, Sérgio A. Draibe, and Maria Eugênia F. Canziani Department

More information

HTA ET DIALYSE DR ALAIN GUERIN

HTA ET DIALYSE DR ALAIN GUERIN HTA ET DIALYSE DR ALAIN GUERIN Cardiovascular Disease Mortality General Population vs ESRD Dialysis Patients 100 Annual CVD Mortality (%) 10 1 0.1 0.01 0.001 25-34 35-44 45-54 55-64 66-74 75-84 >85 Age

More information

Uncarboxylated matrix Gla protein (ucmgp) is associated with coronary artery calcification in haemodialysis patients

Uncarboxylated matrix Gla protein (ucmgp) is associated with coronary artery calcification in haemodialysis patients 2009 Schattauer GmbH, Stuttgart Cardiovascular Biology and Cell Signalling Uncarboxylated matrix Gla protein (ucmgp) is associated with coronary artery calcification in haemodialysis patients Ellen C.

More information

Klotho: renal and extra-renal effects

Klotho: renal and extra-renal effects Klotho: renal and extra-renal effects Juan F. Navarro-González, MD, PhD, FASN Nephrology Service and Research Division University Hospital Nuestra Señora de Candalaria Santa Cruz de Tenerife. Spain Klotho:

More information

Kumar S, Sharma S. Department of Cardiac Radiology, AIIMS, New Delhi, India

Kumar S, Sharma S. Department of Cardiac Radiology, AIIMS, New Delhi, India REVIEW ARTICLE Coronary Artery Calcium Scoring by Cardiac CT as A Screening Tool in 40-45 Years Age Group Predictor of Future Risk for Cardiovascular Events- Systemic Review Kumar S, Sharma S Department

More information

Association of pelvic arterial calcification with arteriovenous thigh graft failure in haemodialysis patients

Association of pelvic arterial calcification with arteriovenous thigh graft failure in haemodialysis patients Nephrol Dial Transplant (2004) 19: 2564 2569 doi:10.1093/ndt/gfh414 Advance Access publication 27 July 2004 Original Article Association of pelvic arterial calcification with arteriovenous thigh graft

More information

The natural history of coronary calcification progression in a cohort of nocturnal haemodialysis patients

The natural history of coronary calcification progression in a cohort of nocturnal haemodialysis patients Nephrol Dial Transplant (2006) 21: 1407 1412 doi:10.1093/ndt/gfl021 Advance Access publication 27 February 2006 Brief Report The natural history of coronary calcification progression in a cohort of nocturnal

More information

Calcium x phosphate product

Calcium x phosphate product Date written: August 2005 Final submission: October 2005 Author: Carmel Hawley Calcium x phosphate product GUIDELINES No recommendations possible based on Level I or II evidence SUGGESTIONS FOR CLINICAL

More information

Secondary Hyperparathyroidism: Where are we now?

Secondary Hyperparathyroidism: Where are we now? Secondary Hyperparathyroidism: Where are we now? Dylan M. Barth, Pharm.D. PGY-1 Pharmacy Resident Mayo Clinic 2017 MFMER slide-1 Objectives Identify risk factors for the development of complications caused

More information

Calcitriol or other compounds that bind and activate

Calcitriol or other compounds that bind and activate Role of Local Versus Systemic Vitamin D Receptors in Vascular Calcification Koba A. Lomashvili, Xiaonan Wang, W. Charles O Neill Objective Calcitriol and various analogs are commonly used to suppress secondary

More information

Measurement of vascular calcification using CT fistulograms

Measurement of vascular calcification using CT fistulograms Nephrol Dial Transplant (2007) 22: 484 490 doi:10.1093/ndt/gfl621 Advance Access publication 7 November 2006 Original Article Measurement of vascular calcification using CT fistulograms Nigel D. Toussaint

More information

Accelerated vascular calcification and relative hypoparathyroidism in incident haemodialysis diabetic patients receiving calcium binders

Accelerated vascular calcification and relative hypoparathyroidism in incident haemodialysis diabetic patients receiving calcium binders Nephrol Dial Transplant (2006) 21: 3215 3222 doi:10.1093/ndt/gfl395 Advance Access publication 28 August 2006 Original Article Accelerated vascular calcification and relative hypoparathyroidism in incident

More information

Normal kidneys filter large amounts of organic

Normal kidneys filter large amounts of organic ORIGINAL ARTICLE - NEPHROLOGY Effect Of Lanthanum Carbonate vs Calcium Acetate As A Phosphate Binder In Stage 3-4 CKD- Treat To Goal Study K.S. Sajeev Kumar (1), M K Mohandas (1), Ramdas Pisharody (1),

More information

Advances in Peritoneal Dialysis, Vol. 29, 2013

Advances in Peritoneal Dialysis, Vol. 29, 2013 Advances in Peritoneal Dialysis, Vol. 29, 2013 Takeyuki Hiramatsu, 1 Takahiro Hayasaki, 1 Akinori Hobo, 1 Shinji Furuta, 1 Koki Kabu, 2 Yukio Tonozuka, 2 Yoshiyasu Iida 1 Icodextrin Eliminates Phosphate

More information

VALVULO-METABOLIC RISK IN AORTIC STENOSIS

VALVULO-METABOLIC RISK IN AORTIC STENOSIS January 2008 (Vol. 1, Issue 1, pages 21-25) VALVULO-METABOLIC RISK IN AORTIC STENOSIS By Philippe Pibarot, DVM, PhD, FACC, FAHA Groupe de Recherche en Valvulopathies (GRV), Hôpital Laval Research Centre

More information

Vascular calcification in patients with Diabetes Mellitus. Dr Jamie Bellinge University of Western Australia Royal Perth Hospital

Vascular calcification in patients with Diabetes Mellitus. Dr Jamie Bellinge University of Western Australia Royal Perth Hospital Vascular calcification in patients with Diabetes Mellitus Dr Jamie Bellinge University of Western Australia Royal Perth Hospital Risk of cardiovascular disease Cardiovascular disease; - Stroke - Coronary

More information

Benefits from angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition in patients with renal failure: latest results

Benefits from angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition in patients with renal failure: latest results European Heart Journal Supplements (2003) 5 (Supplement E), E18 E22 Benefits from angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition in patients with renal failure: latest results B. Pannier, A.P. Guérin, S.J. Marchais

More information

LĖTINE INKSTŲ LIGA SERGANČIŲ VAIKŲ KRAUJAGYSLIŲ KALCIFIKACIJA IR KALCIFIKACIJOS PROFILAKTIKA

LĖTINE INKSTŲ LIGA SERGANČIŲ VAIKŲ KRAUJAGYSLIŲ KALCIFIKACIJA IR KALCIFIKACIJOS PROFILAKTIKA LĖTINE INKSTŲ LIGA SERGANČIŲ VAIKŲ KRAUJAGYSLIŲ KALCIFIKACIJA IR KALCIFIKACIJOS PROFILAKTIKA VASCULAR CALCIFICATION AND CALCIPROPHYLAXIS WITH CKD IN CHILDREN Ernestas Viršilas 2,3, Augustina Jankauskienė

More information

Alink between secondary hyperparathyroidism and

Alink between secondary hyperparathyroidism and Calcium, Phosphorus, Parathyroid Hormone, and Cardiovascular Disease in Hemodialysis Patients: The USRDS Waves 1, 3, and 4 Study Yelena Slinin,* Robert N. Foley,* and Allan J. Collins* *United States Renal

More information

This article is part of a thematic series on Pathobiology of Calcific Vasculopathy and Valvulopathy, which includes the following articles:

This article is part of a thematic series on Pathobiology of Calcific Vasculopathy and Valvulopathy, which includes the following articles: This article is part of a thematic series on Pathobiology of Calcific Vasculopathy and Valvulopathy, which includes the following articles: Thematic Series on the Pathobiology of Vascular Calcification:

More information

Lanthanum: A Safe Phosphate Binder

Lanthanum: A Safe Phosphate Binder Blackwell Publishing Inc Lanthanum: A Safe Phosphate Binder Veerle P. Persy, Geert J. Behets, An R. Bervoets, Marc E. De Broe, and Patrick C. D Haese University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium ABSTRACT Accumulation

More information

The hart and bone in concert

The hart and bone in concert The hart and bone in concert Piotr Rozentryt III Department of Cardiology, Silesian Centre for Heart Disease, Silesian Medical University, Zabrze, Poland Disclosure Research grant, speaker`s fee, travel

More information

Pathogenesis of vascular calcification in chronic kidney disease

Pathogenesis of vascular calcification in chronic kidney disease Kidney International, Vol. 68 (2005), pp. 429 436 PERSPECTIVES IN RENAL MEDICINE Pathogenesis of vascular calcification in chronic kidney disease MARIO COZZOLINO, DIEGO BRANCACCIO, MAURIZIO GALLIENI, and

More information

White Rose Research Online URL for this paper: Version: Accepted Version

White Rose Research Online URL for this paper:   Version: Accepted Version This is a repository copy of Effect on mortality of elective parathyroid surgery in one hundred and three patients with chronic kidney disease : our experience. White Rose Research Online URL for this

More information

A new era in phosphate binder therapy: What are the options?

A new era in phosphate binder therapy: What are the options? http://www.kidney-international.org & 2006 International Society of Nephrology A new era in phosphate binder therapy: What are the options? IB Salusky 1 1 Department of Pediatrics, David Geffen School

More information

조현재 서울대학교병원순환기내과, 심혈관연구실,

조현재 서울대학교병원순환기내과, 심혈관연구실, Molecular Mechanism of Vascular Calcification 2010. 4. 17. 조현재 서울대학교병원순환기내과, 심혈관연구실, 서울대학교병원심혈관센터 Vascular calcification : clinical hurdles Vascular calcification : clinical significance! Clinical consequences

More information

Sevelamer hydrochloride: a calcium- and metal-free phosphate binder

Sevelamer hydrochloride: a calcium- and metal-free phosphate binder DRUG PROFILE Sevelamer hydrochloride: a calcium- and metal-free phosphate binder Anthony J Bleyer & James Balwit Author for correspondence Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Section on Nephrology,

More information

The organs of the human body were created to perform ten functions among which is the function of the kidney to furnish the human being with thought.

The organs of the human body were created to perform ten functions among which is the function of the kidney to furnish the human being with thought. The organs of the human body were created to perform ten functions among which is the function of the kidney to furnish the human being with thought. Leviticus Rabba 3 Talmud Berochoth 6 1 b Outline &

More information

Aortic Valve Stenosis: Medical Treatment, Still in the Pipeline?

Aortic Valve Stenosis: Medical Treatment, Still in the Pipeline? Aortic Valve Stenosis: Medical Treatment, Still in the Pipeline? Philippe Pibarot, DVM, PhD, FACC, FAHA, FESC, FASE Research Group in Valvular Heart Diseases Canada Research Chair in Valvular Heart Diseases

More information

Ectopic calcification develops in the medial layer of

Ectopic calcification develops in the medial layer of Decorin Promotes Aortic Smooth Muscle Cell Calcification and Colocalizes to Calcified Regions in Human Atherosclerotic Lesions Jens W. Fischer, Susie A. Steitz, Pamela Y. Johnson, Allen Burke, Frank Kolodgie,

More information

Pathology of Coronary Artery Disease

Pathology of Coronary Artery Disease Pathology of Coronary Artery Disease Seth J. Kligerman, MD Pathology of Coronary Artery Disease Seth Kligerman, MD Assistant Professor Medical Director of MRI University of Maryland Department of Radiology

More information

Association of Elevated Serum PO 4,Ca PO 4 Product, and Parathyroid Hormone with Cardiac Mortality Risk in Chronic Hemodialysis Patients

Association of Elevated Serum PO 4,Ca PO 4 Product, and Parathyroid Hormone with Cardiac Mortality Risk in Chronic Hemodialysis Patients J Am Soc Nephrol 12: 2131 2138, 2001 Association of Elevated Serum PO 4,Ca PO 4 Product, and Parathyroid Hormone with Cardiac Mortality Risk in Chronic Hemodialysis Patients SANTHI K. GANESH,* AUSTIN G.

More information

Arterial calcification in patients with chronic kidney disease

Arterial calcification in patients with chronic kidney disease 2488 N. Koleganova et al. 25. Kannel WB, Kannel C, Paffenbarger RS Jr et al. Heart rate and cardiovascular mortality: the Framingham Study. Am Heart J 1987;113: 1489 1494 26. Palatini P, Julius S. Association

More information

Research Article The Impact of Warfarin on Patients with End Stage Renal Disease

Research Article The Impact of Warfarin on Patients with End Stage Renal Disease Advances in Vascular Medicine, Article ID 542034, 4 pages http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2014/542034 Research Article The Impact of Warfarin on Patients with End Stage Renal Disease Anahita Dua, 1 Sapan S.

More information

Adrogue, HJ, Frazier, MR, Zeluff, B and Suki, WN (1981): Systemic calciphylaxis revisited. Am J Nephrol; 1:177.

Adrogue, HJ, Frazier, MR, Zeluff, B and Suki, WN (1981): Systemic calciphylaxis revisited. Am J Nephrol; 1:177. Adrogue, HJ, Frazier, MR, Zeluff, B and Suki, WN (1981): Systemic calciphylaxis revisited. Am J Nephrol; 1:177. Angelis M, Wong LL, Myers SA and Wong LM (1997): Calciphylaxis in patients on hemodialysis:

More information

HYPERTENSIVE VASCULAR DISEASE

HYPERTENSIVE VASCULAR DISEASE HYPERTENSIVE VASCULAR DISEASE Cutoffs in diagnosing hypertension in clinical practice sustained diastolic pressures >90 mm Hg, or sustained systolic pressures >140 mm Hg Malignant hypertension A small

More information

Cardiovascular calcification is frequent in elderly patients

Cardiovascular calcification is frequent in elderly patients Controversies in Nephrology Media Calcification and Intima Calcification Are Distinct Entities in Chronic Kidney Disease Kerstin Amann Department of Pathology, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, Erlangen,

More information

Chapter 2. Vascular smooth muscle cells and calcification in atherosclerosis. Astrid Trion Arnoud van der Laarse

Chapter 2. Vascular smooth muscle cells and calcification in atherosclerosis. Astrid Trion Arnoud van der Laarse Vascular smooth muscle cells and calcification in atherosclerosis Astrid Trion Arnoud van der Laarse Department of Cardiology, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, the Netherlands American Heart Journal

More information

Cinacalcet suppresses calcification of the aorta and heart in uremic rats

Cinacalcet suppresses calcification of the aorta and heart in uremic rats original article http://www.kidney-international.org & 28 International Society of Nephrology see commentary on page 1229 Cinacalcet suppresses calcification of the aorta and heart in uremic rats Takehisa

More information

In Vivo Animal Models of Heart Disease. Why Animal Models of Disease? Timothy A Hacker, PhD Department of Medicine University of Wisconsin-Madison

In Vivo Animal Models of Heart Disease. Why Animal Models of Disease? Timothy A Hacker, PhD Department of Medicine University of Wisconsin-Madison In Vivo Animal Models of Heart Disease Timothy A Hacker, PhD Department of Medicine University of Wisconsin-Madison Why Animal Models of Disease? Heart Failure (HF) Leading cause of morbidity and mortality

More information

Declaration of conflict of interest. Nothing to disclose

Declaration of conflict of interest. Nothing to disclose Declaration of conflict of interest Nothing to disclose Strategies for prevention and regression of vascular calcification: new treatment options? Leon J Schurgers, PhD Department of Biochemistry Maastricht

More information

Coronary Artery Calcification

Coronary Artery Calcification Coronary Artery Calcification Julianna M. Czum, MD OBJECTIVES CORONARY ARTERY CALCIFICATION Julianna M. Czum, MD Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center 1. To review the clinical significance of coronary heart

More information

Kidney function is inversely associated with coronary artery calcification in men and women free of cardiovascular disease: TheFramingham Heart Study

Kidney function is inversely associated with coronary artery calcification in men and women free of cardiovascular disease: TheFramingham Heart Study Kidney International, Vol. 66 (2004), pp. 2017 2021 Kidney function is inversely associated with coronary artery calcification in men and women free of cardiovascular disease: TheFramingham Heart Study

More information

CAD in Chronic Kidney Disease. Kuang-Te Wang

CAD in Chronic Kidney Disease. Kuang-Te Wang CAD in Chronic Kidney Disease Kuang-Te Wang InIntroduction What I am going to talk about: CKD and its clinical impact on CAD Diagnosis of CAD in CKD PCI / Revasc Outcomes in CKD CKD PCI CAD Ohtake T,

More information

Therapeutic golas in the treatment of CKD-MBD

Therapeutic golas in the treatment of CKD-MBD Therapeutic golas in the treatment of CKD-MBD Hemodialysis clinic Clinical University Center Sarajevo Bantao, 04-08.10.2017, Sarajevo Abbvie Satellite symposium 06.10.2017 Chronic Kidney Disease Mineral

More information

Assessment of Arterials Functions: Is Pulse Wave Velocity ready forprime Time. Gérard M. LONDON INSERM U970 Hopital Georges Pompidou Paris, France

Assessment of Arterials Functions: Is Pulse Wave Velocity ready forprime Time. Gérard M. LONDON INSERM U970 Hopital Georges Pompidou Paris, France Assessment of Arterials Functions: Is Pulse Wave Velocity ready forprime Time Gérard M. LONDON INSERM U970 Hopital Georges Pompidou Paris, France The causes of Cardiovascular Diseases in CKD Systolic BP;

More information

Plasma pyrophosphate and vascular calcification in chronic kidney disease

Plasma pyrophosphate and vascular calcification in chronic kidney disease Nephrol Dial Transplant (2010) 25: 187 191 doi: 10.1093/ndt/gfp362 Advance Access publication 24 July 2009 Plasma pyrophosphate and vascular calcification in chronic kidney disease W. Charles O Neill 1,

More information

Cost of applying the K/DOQI guidelines for bone metabolism and disease to a cohort of chronic hemodialysis patients

Cost of applying the K/DOQI guidelines for bone metabolism and disease to a cohort of chronic hemodialysis patients original article http://www.kidney-international.org & 2007 International Society of Nephrology Cost of applying the K/DOQI guidelines for bone metabolism and disease to a cohort of chronic hemodialysis

More information

Vascular Calcification: The Killer of Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease

Vascular Calcification: The Killer of Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease Vascular Calcification: The Killer of Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease Masahide Mizobuchi,* Dwight Towler, and Eduardo Slatopolsky* *Renal Division and Center for Cardiovascular Research, Division

More information

Review of Cardiac Imaging Modalities in the Renal Patient. George Youssef

Review of Cardiac Imaging Modalities in the Renal Patient. George Youssef Review of Cardiac Imaging Modalities in the Renal Patient George Youssef ECHO Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) assessment Diastolic dysfunction Stress ECHO Cardiac CT angiography Echocardiography - positives

More information

Arterial function and longevity Focus on the aorta

Arterial function and longevity Focus on the aorta Arterial function and longevity Focus on the aorta Panagiota Pietri, MD, PhD, FESC Director of Hypertension Unit Athens Medical Center Athens, Greece Secrets of longevity Secrets of longevity Unveiling

More information

MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR MECHANISMS OF VASCULAR CALCIFICATION: PATHOGENESIS AND TREATMENT

MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR MECHANISMS OF VASCULAR CALCIFICATION: PATHOGENESIS AND TREATMENT UNIVERSITA DEGLI STUDI DI MILANO Dipartimento di Scienze della Salute Scuola di Dottorato in Scienze Biochimiche, Nutrizionali e Metaboliche Corso di Dottorato in Fisiopatologia, Farmacologia, Clinica

More information

Breast arterial calcification in chronic kidney disease: absence of smooth muscle apoptosis and osteogenic transdifferentiation

Breast arterial calcification in chronic kidney disease: absence of smooth muscle apoptosis and osteogenic transdifferentiation http://www.kidney-international.org & 2013 International Society of Nephrology see commentary on page 501 Breast arterial calcification in chronic kidney disease: absence of smooth muscle apoptosis and

More information

Review Series Immunodiagnostic Systems Limited. Matrix Gla-Protein Overview

Review Series Immunodiagnostic Systems Limited. Matrix Gla-Protein Overview Matrix Gla-Protein: Overview Review Series Immunodiagnostic Systems Limited 1 Introduction In recent years, the insights into the pathogenesis of Vascular Calcification (VC) have changed significantly.

More information

Do We Do Too Many Parathyroidectomies in Dialysis? Sagar Nigwekar MD, MMSc Massachusetts General Hospital

Do We Do Too Many Parathyroidectomies in Dialysis? Sagar Nigwekar MD, MMSc Massachusetts General Hospital Do We Do Too Many Parathyroidectomies in Dialysis? Sagar Nigwekar MD, MMSc Massachusetts General Hospital E-mail: snigwekar@mgh.harvard.edu March 13, 2017 Disclosures statement: Consultant: Allena, Becker

More information

Vascular calcification, a widely recognized and common

Vascular calcification, a widely recognized and common Calcimimetic R-568 Decreases Extraosseous Calcifications in Uremic Rats Treated with Calcitriol Ignacio Lopez,* Escolastico Aguilera-Tejero,* Francisco J. Mendoza,* Yolanda Almaden, Jose Perez, David Martin,

More information

J Babol Univ Med Sci; 20(8); Aug 2018; PP: Received: Dec 24 th 2017, Revised: Mar 17 th 2018, Accepted: May 7 th 2018.

J Babol Univ Med Sci; 20(8); Aug 2018; PP: Received: Dec 24 th 2017, Revised: Mar 17 th 2018, Accepted: May 7 th 2018. Original Article J Babol Univ Med Sci Vol 20, Issu 8; Aug 2018. P:25-30 A Comparison of Abdominal Aortic Calcification Index (Aci) between Hemodialysis Patients and Control Group (Non-Diabetic, Non- Hypertensive

More information

Cardiovascular Diseases in CKD

Cardiovascular Diseases in CKD 1 Cardiovascular Diseases in CKD Hung-Chun Chen, MD, PhD. Kaohsiung Medical University Taiwan Society of Nephrology 1 2 High Prevalence of CVD in CKD & ESRD Foley RN et al, AJKD 1998; 32(suppl 3):S112-9

More information

Vascular calcification occurs pathologically in diabetes

Vascular calcification occurs pathologically in diabetes Matrix Metalloproteinase Inhibition Attenuates Aortic Calcification Xiao Qin, Matthew A. Corriere, Lynn M. Matrisian, Raul J. Guzman Objective Arterial calcification has been associated with matrix metalloproteinase

More information

Report and Opinion 2016;8(12)

Report and Opinion 2016;8(12) Prevalence of calcific aortic valve stenosis in haemodialysis patients at AL Hussein University Hospital. Ahmed Alaa Saad 1, Sami H. Nooh 2, Osama A. Khamis 1, Magdy E. Mohamed 1, Mohamed Abdelhafez 1

More information

ASSOCIATION OF SYSTEMIC INFLAMMATION WITH ARTERIAL STIFFNESS IN HYPERTENSION

ASSOCIATION OF SYSTEMIC INFLAMMATION WITH ARTERIAL STIFFNESS IN HYPERTENSION ASSOCIATION OF SYSTEMIC INFLAMMATION WITH ARTERIAL STIFFNESS IN HYPERTENSION Jung-Sun Kim a and Sungha Park a,b, a Division of Cardiology, b Cardiovascular Genome Center, Yonsei Cardiovascular Center,

More information

Blood Vessels. Dr. Nabila Hamdi MD, PhD

Blood Vessels. Dr. Nabila Hamdi MD, PhD Blood Vessels Dr. Nabila Hamdi MD, PhD ILOs Understand the structure and function of blood vessels. Discuss the different mechanisms of blood pressure regulation. Compare and contrast the following types

More information

Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death

Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death Vitamin D and Osteogenic Differentiation in the Artery Wall Jeffrey J. Hsu,* Yin Tintut,* and Linda L. Demer* Departments of *Medicine and Physiology/Biomedical Engineering, David Geffen School of Medicine

More information

Phosphate excess has been implicated in the substantial

Phosphate excess has been implicated in the substantial Serum Phosphate Levels and Mortality Risk among People with Chronic Kidney Disease Bryan Kestenbaum,* Joshua N. Sampson, Kyle D. Rudser, Donald J. Patterson, Stephen L. Seliger, Bessie Young, Donald J.

More information

Heart Failure (HF) Treatment

Heart Failure (HF) Treatment Heart Failure (HF) Treatment Heart Failure (HF) Complex, progressive disorder. The heart is unable to pump sufficient blood to meet the needs of the body. Its cardinal symptoms are dyspnea, fatigue, and

More information

Young patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) suffer

Young patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) suffer Advanced Coronary and Carotid Arteriopathy in Young Adults With Childhood-Onset Chronic Renal Failure Jun Oh, MD; Rainer Wunsch, MD; Martin Turzer, BSc; Malte Bahner, MD; Paolo Raggi, MD; Uwe Querfeld,

More information