Impact of Cigarette Smoking on Serum Cystatin C and Creatinine Levels and MAU: A Case-Control Study

Background: Smoking-related hemodynamic events may adversely influence renal function. The aim of this study was to evaluate renal impairment biomarkers among healthy people influenced by cigarette smoke. Methods and Results: In this case-control study, 90 subjects were enrolled: 60 were smokers, an...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inInternational journal of biomedicine Vol. 13; no. 1; pp. 58 - 61
Main Authors Farah, Nizar, Abbas, Anass, Alameen, Ayman, Shalabi, Manar, Elderdery, Abozer, Eltayeb, Lienda, Babker, Asaad, Mohamed, Hatem, Aedh, Abdullah
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published International Medical Research and Development Corporation 01.03.2023
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Summary:Background: Smoking-related hemodynamic events may adversely influence renal function. The aim of this study was to evaluate renal impairment biomarkers among healthy people influenced by cigarette smoke. Methods and Results: In this case-control study, 90 subjects were enrolled: 60 were smokers, and 30 were non-smokers (apparently healthy control). Serum CysC was measured using a semi-automated, specific protein analyzer Mispa-i2 (Germany). Serum creatinine and MAU were assayed in the fully automated biochemistry analyzer (Mindray BS380). The mean concentration of CysC was significantly higher in cigarette smokers than in non-smokers (0.793±0.125 vs. 0.619±0.103, P=0.000). Also, the mean of MAU and serum creatinine levels were significantly higher in cigarette smokers than in non-smokers (18.33±3.41 vs. 12.70±0.517, 1.06±0.161 vs. 0.810±0.058, respectively, P=0.000 in both cases). The mean concentration of CysC and MAU was significantly greater in heavy smokers than in light smokers (P=0.000 and P=0.001, respectively). Serum CysC and MAU levels were positively correlated with the age of cigarette smokers (r=0.734 and r=0.730, respectively; P=0.000 in both cases) and the duration of smoking (r=0.773 and r=0.790, respectively; P=0.000 in both cases). Conclusion: cigarette smoking increases the specific renal biomarkers considered risk factors for renal impairment. Using such inflammatory biomarkers as diagnostic tools can be a necessary precaution in the development of chronic kidney disease caused by smoking and in the avoidance of acute renal consequences linked to cigarette smoking.
ISSN:2158-0510
2158-0529
DOI:10.21103/Article13(1)_OA6