News

UVA researchers find element from kidney disease that poisons the heart

UVA researchers find element from kidney disease that poisons the heart

Photo: Metro Services/Metro Services


CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA (CVILLE RIGHT NOW) – Researchers at UVA Health and Mount Sinai have unlocked why more than half the people with chronic kidney disease ultimately die of cardiovascular issues.

Uta Erdbrügger, MD, an internal medicine physician-scientist with the University of Virginia School of Medicine’s Division of Nephrology, and colleagues have found, according to a UVA Health release, “culprit: particles called ‘circulating extracellular vesicles’ produced in diseased kidneys” that ultimately poison the heart.

Extracellular vesicles are produced by almost all cells and serve as important messengers by carrying proteins and other materials to other cells. But the extracellular vesicles produced in kidneys with CKD carry small, non-coding RNA called miRNA that are toxic to the heart, the researchers determined according to the release.

The researchers say the discovery could let doctors identify people at risk and develop new treatments to help prevent and treat heart failure for these patients.

In lab mice, blocking the extracellular vesicles from circulating significantly improved heart function and alleviated heart failure. The scientists also looked at blood plasma samples donated by patients with CKD and by healthy patients and confirmed the presence of harmful extracellular vesicles in the CKD patients.

“Kidney and heart disease can develop silently, so they are often discovered only after damage has already been done,” Dr. Erdbrügger said. “Our findings can help to identify patients at risk for heart failure earlier, enabling earlier treatment and improved outcomes.”

Chronic kidney disease affects more than 1 in 7 Americans – approximately 35 million people in the United States, according to the National Institutes of Health. About 1 in 3 patients with diabetes and about 1 in 5 people with hypertension (high blood pressure) have kidney disease, the agency reports.

The link between chronic kidney disease (CKD) and cardiovascular problems has been well documented, with the severity of cardiovascular disease correlating directly with CKD. But scientists have struggled to understand why, partly because shared risk factors such as obesity and hypertension muddy the waters when it comes to determining cause and effect.

Scientists had, until now, been unable to pinpoint any kidney-specific risk factor that could be causing toxicity in the heart.

“Doctors always wondered how organs such as the kidney and heart communicate with each other. We show that EVs from the kidney can travel to the heart and be toxic,” Erdbrügger said. “We are just at the beginning to understand this communication.”

The results, she said, suggest that scientists may be able to develop a blood test to identify CKD patients at high risk for serious heart problems. They also may be able to target the circulating extracellular vesicles to treat or prevent the poisonous effects on the heart.

“Our hope is to develop novel biomarkers and treatment options for our kidney patients at risk for heart disease,” she said. “Potentially our work will improve precision medicine for CKD and Heart failure patients, so that each patient gets the exact treatment they need.”

Erdbrügger is organizing a hands-on workshop for UVA scientists specifically to advance extracellular vesicle research.

The five-day workshop begins Feb. 7.

The scientists have published their findings in the scientific journal Circulation.

Latest News

13 minutes ago in Lifestyle, Music Scene, Music>Country, Music>General

Weekly Concert & Event Calendar: Feb 16–22, 2026

Fresh
Concert Music Live Entertainment_

CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA (CVILLERIGHTNOW) – Whether you’re looking to take in cinematic short films, indie-folk brilliance, or a string-backed Coldplay tribute,…

2 hours ago in Albemarle County, Charlottesville City, Education, Local, UVA

Hundreds come to see the UVA Presidents’ Day Declaration at the Dome

Fresh
Declaration displayed in the Dome Room

A line extended well into the corridor of the West Lawn waiting to get into the building and up the stairs to the Rotunda Room for at look at one of the two original copies of the Declaration of Independence the University's creator, Thomas Jefferson, wrote.

5 hours ago in Charlottesville City, Local

City Council to consider $10-million-plus 2025 surplus destiny

City Council Tuesday night begins contemplation of what to do with $10,001,875.49 of surplus from the 2025 budget to be distributed in 2026.

7 hours ago in Entertainment

Powered by women, ‘Wuthering Heights’ digs up $34.8 million at the box office for a No. 1 debut

Emerald Fennell's bold reimagining of "Wuthering Heights" brought crowds of women to movie theaters this weekend.

7 hours ago in Sports, Trending

Good game, bad dunk contest. The highs and lows of an eventful NBA All-Star weekend

If you still didn't like the NBA's newest All-Star Game format, you probably just don't like All-Star games. That seemed to be the sports sphere's consensus after the U.S.-against-the-world, round-robin tournament Sunday produced three thrilling mini-games and several impressive individual performances.