Login / Signup

Possibility of Venous Serum Cl- Concentration ([Cl-]s) as a Marker for Human Metabolic Status: Correlation of [Cl-]s to Age, Fasting Blood Sugar (FBS), and Glycated Hemoglobin (HbA1c).

Yoshinori MarunakaKatsumi YagiNoboru ImagawaHironori KobayashiMasaru MurayamaAsami MinamibataYoshiaki TakanashiTakashi Nakahari
Published in: International journal of molecular sciences (2021)
The HCO3- concentration in venous serum ([HCO3-]s) is a factor commonly used for detecting the body pH and metabolic conditions. To exactly detect [HCO3-]s, the venous CO2 pressure should be kept as it is in the vein. The [HCO3-]s measurement is technically complicated to apply for huge numbers of almost heathy persons taking only basic medical examinations. The summation of [HCO3-]s and the venous serum Cl- concentration ([Cl-]s) is approximately constant; therefore, we studied if [Cl-]s could be a marker detecting metabolic conditions instead of [HCO3-]s. Venous blood was obtained from persons taking basic medical examinations (the number of persons = 107,630). Older persons showed higher values of [Cl-]s, fasting blood sugar (FBS), and glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) than younger ones. [Cl-]s showed positive correlation to age and negative correlation to FBS and HBA1c. The negative correlation of [Cl-]s to FBS/HbA1c was obvious in persons with high FBS/HbA1c, leading us to an idea that persons with high FBS/HbA1c show high [HCO3-]s, which might be caused by low activity of carbonic anhydrase in the lung observed in persons with diabetes mellitus under acidotic conditions. Taken together, an easily measured serum electrolyte, [Cl-]s, could be a useful marker estimating metabolic conditions.
Keyphrases
  • endothelial cells
  • weight loss
  • ionic liquid