Carlos G. Musso, G. Aroca-Martínez, Lil Avendaño-Echavez, Andrés Cadena-Bonfanti, Luis Castillo, Henry J González-Torres, Juan C Conde, Elkin Navarro-Quiroz, W. Peña-Vargas, Sandra Hernandez, María Vélez-Verbel, Rafael Perez, Angélica Sierra, Zenen Rua, Jorge Palmera, Sergio Terrasa
{"title":"Acute kidney injury in rural workers: An environmental-stress nephropathy","authors":"Carlos G. Musso, G. Aroca-Martínez, Lil Avendaño-Echavez, Andrés Cadena-Bonfanti, Luis Castillo, Henry J González-Torres, Juan C Conde, Elkin Navarro-Quiroz, W. Peña-Vargas, Sandra Hernandez, María Vélez-Verbel, Rafael Perez, Angélica Sierra, Zenen Rua, Jorge Palmera, Sergio Terrasa","doi":"10.22265/acnef.10.3.670","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Introduction: Mesoamerican nephropathy is a tubule-interstitial nephropathy whose etiology is still unknown. However, clinical cases like Mesoamerican nephropathy have been described in other geographically distant and ethnically diverse regions. Still, they all have a common factor: the intensity of heat and rural physical labor. Objective: To study whether this entity could occur among rural workers in a non-Mesoamerican region with similar climatic and working conditions, in the Colombian Caribbean countryside, and to consider how much repetitive dehydration could weigh in its pathogenesis. Methodology: An observational study was carried out, based on field work in a farm in Sitio Nuevo (Colombia) with 28 rural worker volunteers (rice fields), who were measured for weight, blood pressure, and blood and urine samples to measure electrolytes and osmolarity, at 2 times of the day (morning and evening). Results: Of the 28 young men workers evaluated, 5 (18%) presented a significant increase in serum creatinine during the day (0.8±0.15 vs 1.2±0.17, p<0.001). The volume of water ingested by the workers was highly variable (2,861 ± 1,591 cc). There was a significant increase in serum sodium (p?0.001), and urinary osmolarity (p=0.01) values between morning and afternoon values in these 5 patients. Conclusions: Eighteen percent (18%) of the workers evaluated developed parameters compatible with acute kidney injury and dehydration during the workday in the Colombian Caribbean countryside.","PeriodicalId":121036,"journal":{"name":"Revista Colombiana de Nefrología","volume":"51 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-11-15","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Revista Colombiana de Nefrología","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.22265/acnef.10.3.670","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction: Mesoamerican nephropathy is a tubule-interstitial nephropathy whose etiology is still unknown. However, clinical cases like Mesoamerican nephropathy have been described in other geographically distant and ethnically diverse regions. Still, they all have a common factor: the intensity of heat and rural physical labor. Objective: To study whether this entity could occur among rural workers in a non-Mesoamerican region with similar climatic and working conditions, in the Colombian Caribbean countryside, and to consider how much repetitive dehydration could weigh in its pathogenesis. Methodology: An observational study was carried out, based on field work in a farm in Sitio Nuevo (Colombia) with 28 rural worker volunteers (rice fields), who were measured for weight, blood pressure, and blood and urine samples to measure electrolytes and osmolarity, at 2 times of the day (morning and evening). Results: Of the 28 young men workers evaluated, 5 (18%) presented a significant increase in serum creatinine during the day (0.8±0.15 vs 1.2±0.17, p<0.001). The volume of water ingested by the workers was highly variable (2,861 ± 1,591 cc). There was a significant increase in serum sodium (p?0.001), and urinary osmolarity (p=0.01) values between morning and afternoon values in these 5 patients. Conclusions: Eighteen percent (18%) of the workers evaluated developed parameters compatible with acute kidney injury and dehydration during the workday in the Colombian Caribbean countryside.