Abstract
The concentrations of proline, hydroxyproline, glycine and serine were determined in the plasma of 39 haemodialysis patients and 18 healthy subjects, using liquid chromatography with fluorescence detection. Plasma concentrations of the N-terminal immunoreactive parathyrin were also measured. In haemodialysis patients, the plasma concentrations of glycine (p less than 0.01), hydroxyproline (p less than 0.05) and proline (p less than 0.10) were significantly increased, whereas the serine concentrations (p less than 0.01) were decreased, compared with those of the healthy controls. Haemodialysis patients showed greatly elevated plasma N-terminal immunoreactive parathyrin values (greater than 30 pmol/l), which showed a significant correlation with the hydroxyproline values (r = 0.79). Fourteen haemodialysis patients received erythropoietin therapy. In these patients, changes in the concentrations of plasma amino acids were observed up to one year after the beginning of therapy. In the course of the erythropoietin therapy, the plasma concentrations of glycine (p less than 0.05) and hydroxyproline (p less than 0.10) of the haemodialysis patients decreased, whereas the concentration of serine increased (p less than 0.05) to approximately normal values. The results indicate that erythropoietin therapy leads to a normalization of amino acid metabolism.
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