Environmental Pollution and Its Impact on Kidney Diseases: A Comprehensive Review of Current Evidence
Seung Eun Lee, Yong Seek Park

TL;DR
Environmental pollution contributes to kidney disease by causing damage through various toxic mechanisms, highlighting the need for prevention and policy changes.
Contribution
This review integrates epidemiological and experimental evidence to reveal how environmental pollutants cause kidney disease through shared molecular pathways.
Findings
Long-term exposure to pollutants like heavy metals and air pollution is linked to kidney injury and disease progression.
Pollutants impair kidney repair processes and contribute to chronic kidney disease through oxidative stress and inflammation.
Environmental toxicants affect kidney cells by altering epigenetic and mitochondrial functions.
Abstract
Kidney disease is a growing global public health challenge that accounts for substantial morbidity, premature mortality, and rising healthcare costs. Although diabetes mellitus and hypertension remain the principal clinical risk factors for renal injury, accumulating evidence indicates that environmental pollution represents an independent and globally pervasive contributor to kidney disease burden. Long-term exposure to environmental toxicants, including heavy metals, ambient air pollutants, persistent organic pollutants, and endocrine-disrupting chemicals, has been consistently associated with acute kidney injury, an accelerated decline in renal function, and progression to end-stage kidney disease. The kidney is characterized by a high perfusion rate, specialized tubular transport systems, and a central role in xenobiotic metabolism and excretion, which confer heightened…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChronic Kidney Disease and Diabetes · Dialysis and Renal Disease Management · Heavy Metal Exposure and Toxicity
