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Focusing on Phosphorus Loads: From Healthy People to Chronic Kidney Disease

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 15, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu15051236

Keywords

phosphorus load; chronic kidney disease; phosphorus pool

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Phosphorus is a crucial micromineral that plays a key role in cellular metabolism and tissue structure. The endocrine system coordinates the maintenance of serum phosphorus levels through the actions of hormones like FGF23, PTH, Klotho, and 1,25D. Phosphorus overload, characterized by higher than necessary phosphorus load, can be caused by diet, renal dysfunction, bone disease, dialysis insufficiency, and medications. Serum phosphorus remains the most commonly used indicator for phosphorus overload.
Phosphorus is an essential micromineral with a key role in cellular metabolism and tissue structure. Serum phosphorus is maintained in a homeostatic range by the intestines, bones, and kidneys. This process is coordinated by the endocrine system through the highly integrated actions of several hormones, including FGF23, PTH, Klotho, and 1,25D. The excretion kinetics of the kidney after diet phosphorus load or the serum phosphorus kinetics during hemodialysis support that there is a pool for temporary phosphorus storage, leading to the maintenance of stable serum phosphorus levels. Phosphorus overload refers to a state where the phosphorus load is higher than is physiologically necessary. It can be caused by a persistently high-phosphorus diet, renal function decline, bone disease, insufficient dialysis, and inappropriate medications, and includes but is not limited to hyperphosphatemia. Serum phosphorus is still the most commonly used indicator of phosphorus overload. Trending phosphorus levels to see if they are chronically elevated is recommended instead of a single test when judging phosphorus overload. Future studies are needed to validate the prognostic role of a new marker or markers of phosphorus overload.

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