RecruitingNCT04848636

Cardiac Tissue Sodium Assessment in CKD Patients Using Sodium MRI

Sodium Assessment of the Cardiac Tissue in Chronic Kidney Disease Patients Using Sodium Magnetic Resonance Imaging


Sponsor

London Health Sciences Centre Research Institute OR Lawson Research Institute of St. Joseph's

Enrollment

150 participants

Start Date

Jul 10, 2022

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Conditions

Summary

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is prevalent worldwide and affects around 10% of people living in developed health economies. As the kidney loses its function in patients with CKD, the kidneys are unable to filter toxins out of the blood as efficiently as those of healthy individuals. Arguably, sodium (salt) is the most relevant toxin in CKD and can build up in the kidneys of patients with CKD. Salt build-up has also been found to occur in the heart muscle tissue and could drive the development of scarring of the heart muscle tissue which contributes to heart failure. Using sodium magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), we would like to measure the levels of salt in the heart muscle tissue. We will examine whether the heart muscle tissue has high salt levels, and if so, whether this relates to any heart defects. A conventional proton MRI will be done to measure heart function. The MRI images of healthy volunteers, CKD patients, and those on hemodialysis will be analyzed for levels of salt and the findings will then be compared to the cardiac biomarkers (proteins or enzymes that are released into the blood when the heart is damaged or stressed) and fibrosis (scarring) measured from each patient's proton MRI images to establish a possible correlation. This research has the potential to precede additional studies that may investigate the effect of diuretics (a drug that increases the production of urine) on the heart muscle tissue of CKD patients. Using sodium magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), it is possible to measure the sodium content in the cardiac tissue of patients with kidney disease. In this research study, it will be investigated whether the elevated levels of sodium in patients with kidney disease is also present in their hearts, and if so, whether this relates to cardiac abnormalities. Cardiac sodium MRI images of healthy volunteers, hemodialysis patients, and CKD patients will be analyzed for sodium content. This sodium information will then be compared to the biomarkers of cardiac function and fibrosis measured from each patient's proton MRI images in order to establish a possible correlation. This research has the potential to precede additional studies that may investigate the effect of diuretics on the cardiac tissue of kidney disease patients.


Eligibility

Min Age: 18 Years

Plain Language Summary

Simplified for easier understanding

This study is using a special sodium MRI scan to measure how much sodium builds up in heart tissue in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) — a known risk factor for heart disease — to better understand why kidney patients are at higher risk of heart problems. **You may be eligible if you are in one of these groups:** - You have chronic kidney disease that has persisted for more than 3 months and does not yet require dialysis - You are on hemodialysis (kidney dialysis) for more than 3 months - You are a healthy volunteer without kidney disease, heart disease, diabetes, or liver cirrhosis **You may NOT be eligible if:** - You are pregnant, breastfeeding, or planning to become pregnant - You cannot have an MRI — for example, due to a pacemaker, metal implants, large body size, or claustrophobia Talk to your doctor to see if this trial is right for you.

This summary was AI-generated to explain the trial in plain language. It is not medical advice. Always discuss eligibility with your doctor before enrolling in a clinical trial.

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Interventions

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTCardiac Sodium and Proton MRI

Sodium-23 MRI of the Heart Proton MRI of the Heart


Locations(1)

Victoria Hospital

London, Ontario, Canada

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NCT04848636


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