Uncovering the brain effects of kidney disease

Uncovering the brain effects of kidney disease

New research out of 澳门六合彩开奖现场 offers intriguing insights into the kidney-brain connection.

July 24, 2018

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Kidney disease doesn鈥檛 just affect a patient鈥檚 body, it鈥檚 hard on their brain too -- but no one really knows to what extent.

Now, new research by Queen鈥檚 University researcher Gord Boyd (School of Medicine) at Kingston Health Sciences Centre is offering intriguing insights into the kidney-brain connection that could change the way that kidney disease is assessed and treated in future.

For the first time, patients on dialysis are being assessed by the KINARM, a state-of-the-art robotic system developed at Queen鈥檚 University, to measure the brain effects of kidney disease. The KINARM precisely measures what鈥檚 happening in an individual鈥檚 brain or nervous system by testing their ability to perform ordinary movements and tasks.

Gord Boyd uses the KINARM to examine the connection between the kidneys and the brain. (Photo by Matthew Manor)

Leading the research is Dr. Boyd, a critical care doctor and neurologist at Kingston Health Sciences Centre who looks at the links between oxygen levels and brain injury in intensive care patients. He says the project was sparked by a casual conversation with Dr. Rachel Holden, a kidney disease specialist at KHSC whose patients are often in intensive care. 鈥淲e were talking about sensors for tissue oxygenation in the brain, she suggested that we should use them on her patients,鈥 says Dr. Boyd.

Early indications have been startling, he says. 鈥淲e鈥檝e been told by the KINARM team that our cohort of patients are some of the most cognitively impaired they鈥檝e ever seen.鈥  

While there is some evidence showing that kidney disease, especially in its later stages, can affect some brain functions such as attention and memory, the conventional pen-and-paper tests used to track these effects produce variable and subjective results 鈥 and they can鈥檛 diagnose the motor effects of brain injury, says Dr. Boyd.

鈥淭here鈥檚 no gold-standard test for the effects of kidney disease, so it鈥檚 hard to know the patient鈥檚 degree of cognitive impairment,鈥 says Jessica Vanderlinden, a PhD candidate who is working with Dr. Boyd on the project.

Over the past two years Dr. Boyd and Ms. Vanderlinden have been studying patients on hemodialysis, a four-hour procedure usually done in hospital, and patients on home dialysis, a less intensive process that cleanses the blood of the body鈥檚 toxins overnight. The patients do KINARM tests before beginning dialysis, then follow-up testing at three months and one year.

The researchers will compare patients鈥 test scores and oxygenation data to study which procedure 鈥 hemodialysis or home dialysis -- has the better effect on patients鈥 cognitive function.

They鈥檝e now expanded the scope of their research to include patients at all stages of kidney disease 鈥 from mild to moderate, chronic and end stage, which requires dialysis.

They鈥檙e also collaborating with nephrologist Sam Silver to include patients with a single episode of acute kidney injury. 鈥淣o one has ever looked at the brains of this specific group of patients,鈥 Boyd says.

鈥淲e鈥檙e hoping to come up with a really good description of the neurological complications of kidney disease,鈥 says Ms Vanderlinden.

This research could provide new insights on treating patients, the researchers say. For example, KINARM tests have shown visuo-spatial issues in some dialysis patients, so driving is a concern, Boyd says.

As well, it could show that hemodialysis itself may need to be re-examined, he says. 鈥淚f hemodialysis patients have accumulated impairments, how can we make dialysis more gentle on the brain? Or it may suggest that we start dialysis sooner, or do transplants sooner.鈥

This data can also point to the need for end-of-life conversations. 鈥淚f we know how much they are impaired, we can develop a plan to start these conversations with them, or if they鈥檙e very impaired, with their substitute decision-makers,鈥 Boyd says.

Their work has been sponsored by the Queen鈥檚 Department of Medicine Innovation Fund and through equipment donated by the University Hospitals Kingston Foundation.

 

Health Sciences