doi:10.1186/s12882-024-03584-0...
BioMed Central
Medicine & Public Health
2024
08.05.2024
Background Oxidative stress, an imbalance between reactive oxygen species production and antioxidant capacity, increases in patients with coronavirus disease (COVID-19) or renal impairment.
We investigated whether combined COVID-19 and end-stage renal disease (ESRD) would increase oxidative stress levels compared to each disease alone.
Methods Oxidative stress was compared among three groups.
Two groups comprised patients with COVID-19 referred to the hospital with or without renal impairment (COVID-ESRD group [ n = 18]; COVID group [ n = 17]).
The third group (ESRD group [ n = 18]) comprised patients without COVID-19 on maintenance hemodialysis at a hospital.
Results The total oxidative stress in the COVID-ESRD group was lower than in the COVID group ( p = 0.047).
The total antioxidant status was higher in the COVID-ESRD group than in the ESRD ( p < 0.001) and COVID ( p < 0.001) groups after controlling for covariates.
The oxidative stress index was lower in the COVID-ESRD group than in the ESRD ( p = 0.001) and COVID ( p < 0.001) groups.
However, the three oxidative parameters did not differ significantly between the COVID and COVID-ESRD groups.
Conclusions The role of reactive oxygen species in the pathophysiology of COVID-19 among patients withESRD appears to be non-critical.
Therefore, the provision of supplemental antioxidants may not confer a therapeutic advantage, particularly in cases of mild COVID-19 in ESRD patients receiving hemodialysis.
Nonetheless, this area merits further research.
Beck, Nam-Seon,Seo, Yeonju,Park, Taesung,Jun, Sang‑Sin,Im, Joung-Il,Hong, Sae-Yong, 2024, Oxidative stress in patients with coronavirus disease and end-stage renal disease: a pilot study, BioMed Central