Evaluation of diagnostic potential of maternal serum ischemia modified albumin in cases of pre-eclampsia
Author:
Gupta Akshat1, Jha Puja K.2, Aggarwal Richa3, Ahirwar Ashok K.4, Almeida Edelbert A.2, Kar Rajarshi2
Affiliation:
1. MBBS (Pursuing) , 79317 University College of Medical Sciences and GTB Hospital , Delhi , India 2. Department of Biochemistry , 79317 University College of Medical Sciences and GTB Hospital , Delhi , India 3. Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology , 79317 University College of Medical Sciences and GTB Hospital , Delhi , India 4. Department of laboratory Medicine , AIIMS , New Delhi , India
Abstract
Abstract
Objectives
The underlying causes and mechanisms of pre-eclampsia (PE), its exact etiology remains unclear and poorly understood. Hypoxia, ischemia, and oxidative stress induced by free radicals have been associated with development of PE. Ischemia-modified albumin (IMA) is a chemically modified albumin due to oxidative stress. IMA, a serum biomarker of hypoxia, ischemia, and oxidative free radicals is a potential biomarker for PE. The aim of the current proposal was to study serum IMA as a diagnostic biomarker of pre-eclampsia (PE) in pregnant females and to evaluate the correlation between serum IMA and different markers of pre-eclampsia (BP, urinary protein, LFT, KFT, serum total protein & uric acid).
Methods
A total of 60 pregnant women aged between 21 and 35 years were recruited (30 PE cases and 30 normal pregnancy). Serum IMA was measured by spectrophotometric method developed by Bar-Or D. BP and biochemical parameters (urinary protein, LFT, KFT, serum total protein & uric acid) were also assayed and compared between two groups. Correlation analysis was done for analyzing the relationship between serum IMA and biochemical parameters.
Results
The mean serum IMA was significantly higher in normotensive pregnant females (0.93 ABSU) than PE cases (0.71 ABSU). Kidney function and liver function parameters were more deranged in PE cases than in controls. Serum IMA was positively correlated with serum creatinine (r=0.322), serum uric acid (r=0.54) and urinary protein (0.376) whereas negatively correlated with total serum bilirubin (r=−0.515) and serum albumin (r=−0.380).
Conclusions
Elevated serum IMA concentrations in normotensive pregnant controls as compared to PE cases suggest that apart from ongoing ischemia and oxidative stress in placenta IMA values are influenced by many other mechanisms in pregnancy.
Publisher
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Reference35 articles.
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