Too much of this stuff in your body may strongly reduce your lifespan

Credit: CC0 Public Domain

Uric acid is a by-product of the body’s metabolism and is linked to conditions such as heart disease, high blood pressure, stroke, kidney disease, and gout.

In a recent study at the University of Limerick, researchers found that extreme values of serum uric acid (SUA) levels in the blood can markedly reduce a patient’s chance of surviving and reduce their lifespans by up to 11 years.

They found evidence of strong reductions in patient’s survival linked to extreme concentrations of serum uric acid (SUA) for both men and women.

One author of the study is Dr. Leonard Browne, Ph.D., Senior Research Fellow in Biostatistics at the UL School of Medicine.

The study is published in the European Journal of Internal Medicine.

The key question of the study was to determine whether SUA, a routinely measured blood marker, could help predict a patient’s lifespan, all else being equal.

The team used data from the National Kidney Disease Surveillance System (NKDSS), based at UL, and created a large cohort of 26,525 patients.

They found that in men, the message was quite clear.

The median survival was reduced by an average of 9.5 years for men with low levels of SUA (less than 238μmol/L), and 11.7 years for men with elevated SUA levels (greater than 535 μmol/L) compared to patients with levels of 357-416 μmol/L.

Similarly, for women, the survival was reduced by almost 6 years for those with SUA levels greater than 416 μmol/L, compared to women with SUA in the normal range.

But the shape of the mortality curves was quite different for men and women, according to the team.

For men, the shape of the association was predominantly U-shaped with optimal survival between 304-454 μmol/L, whereas, for women, the pattern of association was J-shaped with an elevated risk of mortality only present for women with SUA levels beyond 409 μmol/L.

The team says there is good evidence that high levels of SUA are linked to a range of serious chronic medical conditions such as kidney failure, high blood pressure, heart disease, stroke, and diabetes.

These known associations might in part explain the high mortality that we observed for patients with elevated SUA levels in this study.

On the other hand, and quite surprisingly, the team also found that very low levels of SUA were also associated with a higher risk of death primarily in men.

This would, of course, suggest that very low levels of SUA are also detrimental to survival.

Interestingly, men who died with low SUA levels had a higher proportion of deaths from cancer—unlike those with high SUA levels who had a higher proportion of deaths from cardiovascular disease.

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