Breath ethane in dialysis patients and control subjects.

2003 
Abstract Oxidant stress may play a role in the accelerated pathology of patients on dialysis, especially in the development of cardiovascular disease, which is a frequent condition in end-stage renal disease (ESRD) patients. Measurement of hydrocarbons can be employed to assess oxidant stress since breath hydrocarbons have been directly traced to in vivo breakdown of lipid hydroperoxides. We undertook to measure ethane, a major breath hydrocarbon, in 15 control subjects, 13 patients on peritoneal dialysis (PD), and 35 patients on hemodialysis (HD). Within the HD group, we separately examined 12 diabetic and 23 nondiabetic patients. Breath samples were collected after patients had breathed purified air for 4 min, and ethane content was measured by GC and expressed as pmoles/kg-body weight-minute (pmol/kg-min). As the data for the hemodialysis patients appeared skewed, nonparametric statistical techniques were employed to analyze these data, which are reported as median and interquartile range (IQR). Ethane levels were similar in 15 control subjects (median, 2.50 pmol [1.38–3.30]/kg-min] and 13 PD patients (median, 2.51 pmol [1.57–3.17]/kg-min). Breath ethane was significantly elevated in a portion (18 of 35 patients, 52%) of the HD patients (median, 6.16 pmol [4.46–8.88]/kg-min) ( p
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