Lipocalin associated with neutrophilic gelatin as a biomarker for early diagnosis of acute kidney injury

  • Luisa Tovar González Bacterióloga y Laboratorista Clínica. Hospital San Juan de Dios, Cumaribo, Vichada, Colombia
  • Laura Ximena Ramírez López Universidad de Boyacá. Carrera 2ª Este No. 64 - 169. Tunja, Colombia. Magíster en Bioquímica Clínica. Bacterióloga y Laboratorista Clínica, Grupo de Investigación del Programa de Bacteriología y Laboratorio Clínico, GRIBAC.
  • Carmen Cecilia Almonacid Urrego Bacterióloga y Laboratorista Clínico, MSc Microbiología con énfasis en Bioquímica, PhD Biomedicina. Grupo de Investigación ECZA-Universidad Colegio Mayor de Cundinamarca, grupo de investigación GICAEDS-Universidad Santo Tomás
  • Nadia Catalina Alfonso Vargas Universidad de Boyacá. Carrera 2ª Este No. 64 - 169. Tunja, Colombia. Doctora en Biotecnología. Bacterióloga y Laboratorista Clínica, Grupo de Investigación del Programa de Bacteriología y Laboratorio Clínico – GRIBAC
Keywords: Kidney, NGAL, Urine, Plasma, Diagnosis, Creatinine, Glomerular Filtration Rate, Acute Kidney Injury, Early Diagnosis

Abstract

 

Introduction: Acute kidney injury is an early-stage renal damage that can be detected by neutrophilic gelatinase-associated lipocalin protein. Aim: To evaluate the usefulness of neutrophilic gelatinase-associated lipocalin protein as an early marker of Acute Kidney Injury. Methodology: narrative review following the PRISMA statement criteria. PubMed, Scopus, and LILACS were the databases consulted. Results: 23 articles published in the last five years were identified. The evidence shows that this protein has biochemical characteristics useful in the early diagnosis of renal injury in different situations and populations. Discussion: The behavior of NGAL has demonstrated its increase in plasma up to 2 hours after the onset of renal impairment. Likewise, its synthesis is not affected by variables such as sex, body mass index, high protein intake, excess physical activity, and alteration in glomerular filtration, which do modify Crs concentrations. Conclusions: Neutrophilic gelatinase-associated lipocalin meets the criteria to become an early biomarker for Acute Kidney Injury. 

Published
2024-06-10
How to Cite
1.
Tovar González L, Ramírez López LX, Almonacid Urrego CC, Alfonso Vargas NC. Lipocalin associated with neutrophilic gelatin as a biomarker for early diagnosis of acute kidney injury. Rev Nefrol Dial Traspl. [Internet]. 2024Jun.10 [cited 2024Jul.16];44(02):104-12. Available from: http://revistarenal.org.ar/index.php/rndt/article/view/980
Section
Review Article