STUDY OF ANAEMIA & IRON PROFILE IN CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASE (CKD) PATIENTS ON MAINTENANCE DIALYSIS AND ITS CORRELATION WITH DIABETES MELLITUS
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Published:2021-09-01
Issue:
Volume:
Page:37-39
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ISSN:
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Container-title:INDIAN JOURNAL OF APPLIED RESEARCH
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language:en
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Short-container-title:IJAR
Author:
Chavda Sandeep1, Shah Shaila2, Shah Jay3
Affiliation:
1. M.D.(Medicine) Senior Resident, M. K. Shah Medical College And Research Centre, Chandkheda, Ahmedabad-382424 2. M.D. (Medicine). Associate Professor. Department Of Medicine, GCS Medical College And Research Centre, Opp. D. R.M. Ofce, Nr. Chamunda Bridge, Naroda Road, Ahmedabad-380025. 3. 3 year resident in General Medicine, GCS Medical College And Research Centre, Opp. D. R.M. Ofce, Nr. Chamunda Bridge, Naroda Road, Ahmedabad-380025.
Abstract
Most patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) have anaemia, the cause of which is erythropoietin and iron deciency.
Anaemia in patients on haemodialysis is associated with poor patient outcomes. Diabetes remains one of the predominant
aetiologies of CKD all over the world. The study was undertaken to study the iron prole in haemodialyzed patients and its corelation with
diabetes mellitus. Sixty-six patients were enrolled in the study with the aim to study the prevalence of anaemia and diabetes in haemodialyzed
patients as well as the iron prole in these patients. Patients were studied as a single group as well as divided into two groups, a non-diabetic group
comprising of 36 patients and a diabetic group comprising of 30 patients. Anaemia was found to be prevalent in 56(84.84%) patients out of which
28(50%) were diabetics. Also, diabetics comprised of 45.45% of the study group. Various parameters like haemoglobin with blood indices and
iron prole was studied and compared in both groups. There was no signicant difference in the various parameters in both groups except a
signicantly low MCH and MCHC and signicantly high ferritin levels in the diabetic group. We concluded that the low MCH and MCHC might
be suggestive of an increased cardiovascular risk in diabetic patients while higher levels of serum ferritin may suggest sub-clinical inammation
rather than iron overload. In conclusion diabetes remains to be the single most important aetiology for the causation of end stage renal disease and
appropriate management of anaemia in terms of EPO and iron therapy remains the mainstay of therapy in haemodialyzed patients.
Publisher
World Wide Journals
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