
Serum total free phenols are elevated in chronic renal failure, acute renal failure and hepatic coma. Being partly protein-bound, phenols behave during dialysis in a similar manner to considerably larger molecules which are not protein-bound. In view of their potential toxicity they should be considered as an alternative to 'middle molecules'. Patients on regular hemodialysis have retention of phenols if their post-dialysis serum creatinine is above 6-7 mg/dl. Patients on short time dialysis have high pre-dialysis neutral phenol levels. Such levels are sufficiently high to suggest a role in the genesis of neurological symptoms, anemia and bone disease. Certainly pre-dialysis free phenols reflect adequacy of dialysis.
Time Factors, Phenols, Renal Dialysis, Creatinine, Hepatic Encephalopathy, Humans, Kidney Failure, Chronic, Acute Kidney Injury
Time Factors, Phenols, Renal Dialysis, Creatinine, Hepatic Encephalopathy, Humans, Kidney Failure, Chronic, Acute Kidney Injury
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