Low water-soluble uremic toxins.

Raymond Camille Vanholder, Griet Glorieux, Rita De Smet, Peter Paul De Deyn
Author Information
  1. Raymond Camille Vanholder: Department of Internal Medicine, University Hospital, Gent, Belgium. raymond.vanholder@rug.ac.be

Abstract

The uremic syndrome is the result of the retention of solutes, which under normal conditions are cleared by the healthy kidneys. Uremic retention products are arbitrarily subdivided according to their molecular weight. Low-molecular-weight molecules are characterized by a molecular weight below 500 D. The purpose of the present publication is to review the main water soluble, nonprotein bound uremic retention solutes, together with their main toxic effects. We will consecutively discuss creatinine, glomerulopressin, the guanidines, the methylamines, myo-inositol, oxalate, phenylacetyl-glutamine, phosphate, the polyamines, pseudouridine, the purines, the trihalomethanes, and urea per se.

MeSH Term

Animals
Humans
Solubility
Toxins, Biological
Uremia

Chemicals

Toxins, Biological

Word Cloud

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