The Philippine Star

Rise in heat waves tied to kidney disease ‘epidemics’

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An increase in heat waves worldwide linked to climate change may be behind epidemics of kidney disease detected in workers who are increasing­ly exposed to heat and dehydratio­n, according to a research review.

Global warming has increased temperatur­es overall by nearly one degree Celsius (just under two degrees Fahrenheit) over the past century, and they are expected to rise by another three to four degrees C by the end of this century, the authors write. Heat waves have also become more common, with about three quarters of the increase blamed on climate change, they add.

Heat waves increase with climate change

“There’s evidence that long periods of heat waves have increased more significan­tly with climate change, when it’s extremely hot the risk for kidney damage begins to really become evident,” said senior study author Dr. Richard Johnson of the University of Colorado, Denver.

Extreme heat exposure can have immediate health effects, causing dehydratio­n, heat exhaustion and heat stroke, as well as worsening pre- existing chronic disease, which can be fatal, Johnson and his colleagues write in

the Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology.

Although chronic kidney disease is often caused by diabetes or high blood pressure, it can also be the result of recurrent heat exposure with physical activity and not enough hydration, which puts a heavy strain on the kidneys.

Chronic kidney disease often has no symptoms and has to be diagnosed by blood test. In early stages it may be treated with medication­s, but as kidneys fail over time they may require dialysis to filter the blood, and ultimately they can fail entirely, leading to death or kidney transplant.

Kidney disease cases rising

Johnson and his coauthors studied reports of upticks in cases of chronic kidney disease detected in hot climates and among population­s without regular access to healthcare, such as poor agricultur­al workers.

A recent epidemic of chronic kidney disease in Central America, particular­ly among male sugarcane workers on the Pacific coast, was initially suspected to be linked to chemicals or other toxins, for example.

But the kidney damage was found to be more common among sugarcane cutters than among pesticide applicator­s, and less common at higher altitudes where temperatur­es are cooler - suggesting that workers with the greatest exertion and heat exposure had the highest risk.

A similar epidemic is currently affecting about 100,000 individual­s in northern Sri Lanka, primarily among young to middle-aged male rice farmers and women working in the fields, the authors write. Still another epidemic is affecting Andhra Pradesh on the southweste­rn coast of India, an area with some of the longest heat waves in the country.

Heat waves occur when sustained temperatur­es reach 40 degrees C ( 104 degrees F), or the temperatur­e increases by five to six degrees C over the normal maximum temperatur­e of the region or any time temperatur­es reach 45 degrees C (113 degrees F) or greater.

“It is undeniable that there will be numerous direct and indirect health effects as a result of climate change,” said Rebecca Laws, a postdoctor­al associate at Boston University School of Public Health who was not part of the new study. “We could be witnessing one such direct health effect, as epidemics of (chronic kidney disease) become more apparent in hot and humid regions throughout the world,” she said.

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