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Departments of Medicine, Pathology, Physiology and Biophysics, University of South Florida Health Sciences Center, and James A. Haley Veterans Hospital, Tampa, Florida 33612
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ABSTRACT |
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Seventeen Sprague-Dawley rats had
ischemic nonoliguric acute renal failure (ARF) induced by vascular
clamping resulting in their preischemic blood urea nitrogen (BUN) and
creatinine levels of 16 ± 1 and 0.56 ± 0.05 mg/dl to increase to
162 ± 4 and 8.17 ± 0.5 mg/dl, P < 0.001, respectively, at
day 4 of postischemia. Vessel dilator, a 37-amino-acid
cardiac peptide hormone (0.3 µg · kg
1 · min
1
ip), decreased the BUN and creatinine levels to 53 ± 17 mg/dl and
0.98 ± 0.12 mg/dl (P < 0.001) in another seven animals
where ARF had been established for 2 days. Water excretion doubled with ARF and was further augmented by vessel dilator. Transthoracic echocardiography revealed left ventricular dilation as a probable cause
of the increase in vessel dilator in the circulation with ARF, and
vessel dilator infusion reversed this dilation. At day 6 of
ARF, mortality decreased to 14% with vessel dilator from 88% without
vessel dilator. Acute tubular necrosis was <5% in the vessel
dilator-treated rats compared with 25% to >75% in the placebo-treated ARF animals. We conclude that vessel dilator improves acute tubular necrosis and renal function in established ARF.
atrial natriuretic peptides; blood urea nitrogen; serum creatinine; diuresis; transthoracic echocardiography
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INTRODUCTION |
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A NUMBER OF POTENTIAL THERAPIES of ischemic acute renal
failure (ARF) have been examined with infusion of one cardiac peptide, i.e., atrial natriuretic factor (ANF), which had encouraging
results in early studies of ARF in animals (5, 12, 16,
19). However, the administration of 0.2 µg of
ANF · kg body
wt
1 · min
1
for 24 h to humans with ARF revealed that ANF did not cause significant improvement and did not reduce the need for dialysis or reduce mortality (2). ANF actually decreased survival in the nonoliguric ARF
subjects, which was 75% of the subjects (2). The usefulness of ANF for
treatment is hampered by its short half-life of 2.5 min (1, 23) and by
its very short duration of action (14, 25, 26). Of 504 ARF patients
treated with ANF, 46% developed hypotension (2), which would further
limit its usefulness in ARF.
Vessel dilator, a 37-amino-acid peptide hormone synthesized within the heart by the same gene as ANF, is distinctly different from ANF. Vessel dilator, a linear peptide hormone, and ANF, a ring-structured peptide, have no structural similarity and no similarity, whatsoever in their amino acid sequences (23). Vessel dilator binds to a different receptor than ANF, and the mechanism of its natriuretic effects is completely different from ANF (4, 6, 23). Vessel dilator causes a natriuresis by enhancing the synthesis of prostaglandin E2, which, in turn, inhibits renal Na+-K+-ATPase (4, 6). ANF does not enhance the synthesis of prostaglandin E2 and does not inhibit Na+-K+-ATPase (4, 6).
Vessel dilator has at least equally potent natriuretic and diuretic effects in healthy animals (14) and humans (25, 26) as ANF and markedly better (P < 0.001) natriuretic and diuretic effects than ANF in one sodium and water-retaining state, i.e., congestive heart failure (24). There have not been any hypotensive episodes in either healthy individuals (25, 26) or persons with congestive heart failure treated with vessel dilator (24). The beneficial natriuretic and diuretic effects of vessel dilator are not blunted in congestive heart failure compared with healthy subjects, whereas the effects of ANF are markedly blunted (7, 24).
For the potential treatment of ARF with these two cardiac hormones, vessel dilator has several advantages over ANF. First, the effects of vessel dilator on the kidney last more than 6 h compared with 30 min or less for ANF (24). Second, vessel dilator enhances the synthesis of prostaglandin E2 within the kidney (4, 6), and prostaglandins have protective effects in ARF (3, 8, 15, 21, 28). The present investigation was designed to determine whether vessel dilator has beneficial effects in renal failure [i.e., decreases serum blood urea nitrogen (BUN) and creatinine] and/or improves renal histology when renal failure secondary to ischemic acute tubular necrosis has been established for 2 days.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Surgical procedure. Ischemic renal failure was induced in 24 male Sprague-Dawley rats (Zivc-Miller), weighing 200-270 g with 50 min of ischemia. Seven of the ARF rats received vessel dilator. There were 17 ARF rats in the control group. Each of these rats were handled identically with the control rats as well as
the experimental group of rats receiving an osmotic pump placement 2 days after receiving a unilateral nephrectomy as described below. The
only difference was that the control group received 0.9% saline only
in their osmotic pumps, whereas the experimental group had vessel
dilator dissolved in 0.9% saline within their osmotic pumps. This
research protocol was approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use
Committee of the University of South Florida and the James A. Haley
Veterans Administration Hospital and followed the "Guiding
Principles for Research Involving Animals and Human Beings." All
rats had free access to water and standard rat chow (Harlan Teklad,
Madison, WI), which contained 1% phosphate. The rats were anesthetized
with Equithesin (sodium pentobarbital/choral hydrate; 2 mg/kg ip). The
abdominal region was shaved, and each animal was placed on a heating
pad to maintain constant temperature. The abdominal area was then
prepared with Betadine, and sterile drapes were applied. After we
performed a midline celiotomy, the intestines were displaced upward
exposing the right kidney. After blunt dissection of the right kidney
from its bed, the right renal artery and vein were identified and
ligated with 1-0 silk suture, and the right kidney was harvested. The
left kidney was identified, the left renal artery was bluntly
dissected, and a nontraumatic vascular clamp (Roboz microaneurysm
clamp, Roboz Surgical Instrument, Washington, DC) was applied across
the artery for 50 min. (Pilot studies were performed using 30, 40, 45, and 60 min of ischemia, but the 30-min time period did not lead
to severe, reproducible sustained increments in serum creatinine, and
with the 60-min time period of ischemia, 40% died within 2 days and 90% died within 8 days). The 40, 45, and 50 min of
ischemia produced similar results as detailed in
RESULTS. Ischemia was visually confirmed by
blanching of the kidney. Physiological saline (50 ml/kg) at room
temperature was instilled into the abdominal cavity during the entire
procedure. After the clamp was released, the abdominal wall was closed
with 3-0 Dexon II sutures. The animals were then allowed to recover. Forty-eight hours after the initial ischemia, the animals were reanesthetized, the abdominal wall was reopened, and an osmotic pump
(model 1003D, Alzet, Alza, Palo Alto, CA) was inserted into the
peritoneal cavity. These 3-day microosmotic pumps contained either
0.9% saline (control) or vessel dilator infused in 0.9% saline
continuously at a concentration of 0.3 µg · kg body
wt
1 · min
1.
(These pumps deliver their contents at the above constant rate of
infusion for 72 h into the peritoneal cavity without having to be
attached to vasculature). Thus each of the ARF animals had either
vessel dilator (n = 7) or saline (n = 17) infused for
72 h after ARF had been established for 2 days. As an additional control for this investigation, there were six sham animals that had
the same midline celiotomy and removal of their right kidney, but these
animals did not have ischemia induced. The end point of these
investigations was 8 days after induction of ischemic renal failure,
but a number of the animals did not survive the full 8 days.
Renal function. BUN and serum creatinine levels were measured using colorimetric diagnostic kits from Sigma Diagnostics (St. Louis, MO). BUN was measured after deproteinization (10 min in boiling water bath) utilizing a spectrophotometer (Milton Roy Spectronic 1001, Rochester, NY) with results monitored at 535 nm. Serum creatinine measurement was measured in this same spectrophotometer, but the wavelength monitored was 500 nm. Multiple assays were initially performed with rat blood to ensure that small changes in serum creatinine and BUN could be reliably assessed. Blood for these measurements was collected at baseline and every 2 days after induction of ARF for a total of 8 days via a tail snip; with 0.5 to 1 ml of blood collected, this volume was replaced orally with water.
Measurement of vessel dilator. The blood samples and flushings of the osmotic pumps with 4 ml of 0.9% sodium chloride were collected into chilled 5-ml EDTA tubes to prevent proteolytic breakdown of any peptides that might be present. Each sample was extracted with 100% ethanol (1:2 dilution) (26, 30). Vessel dilator was measured by a radioimmunoassay devised to amino acids 31 to 67 of its 126-amino acid prohormone as described in detail previously by our laboratory (24-26, 30). 125I-labeled vessel dilator (10,000 counts/min) and vessel dilator used for infusion were synthesized by Peninsula Laboratories (Belmont, CA). The intra-assay coefficient of variation for the vessel dilator radioimmunoassay was 5.3%, and the interassay coefficient of variation was 8%. The vessel dilator antibody has 100% cross-reactivity with vessel dilator in human plasma but only 14% cross-reactivity to vessel dilator in rat plasma. (This antibody was devised to the human amino acid sequence of vessel dilator.) The vessel dilator values in RESULTS are the actual measured values, but because of the 14% cross-reactivity, these values are approximately one-seventh of the concentration of vessel dilator present in the circulation of rats. Serial dilution of pooled plasma has revealed excellent parallelism of standards and unknowns in this assay (30).
Purity of vessel dilator. Vessel dilator utilized in these studies was synthesized by Peninsula Laboratories. Before its use in these studies, samples of this commercially synthesized peptide were subjected to high-performance liquid chromatography to determine purity by use of a Novapak C18 (5 µm) cartridge column. The flow rate for the high-performance liquid chromatography study was 1 ml/min with 0.1% trifluoroacetate solvent in pump A and 60% acetonitrile in 0.1% trifluoroacetate in pump B, with a gradient of 0-60% acetonitrile achieved in 40 min. This evaluation verified purity and authenticity compared with the known high-performance liquid chromatography elution profile of the vessel dilator (30). After vessel dilator was determined to be pure, the vessel dilator was dissolved in 0.9% saline solution for the infusion studies.
Histopathological scoring of severity of ARF. To determine
whether there are beneficial effect(s) of vessel dilator on renal histology, we utilized the pathological scoring method of Klausner et
al. (11). For this histopathological evaluation, the kidneys were cut
coronally and embedded in paraffin. Four-micrometer sections were
prepared. The sections then were stained with hematoxylin and eosin,
examined in a blinded fashion by a renal pathologist (S. R. Saba), and scored with a semiquantitative scale designed to evaluate changes in the kidney 8 days after ischemic renal failure.
Harvesting of the kidneys for this evaluation was accomplished utilizing 4 mg/kg ip of Equithesin (pentobarbital sodium/choral hydrate). One whole deep coronal section was examined under the microscope and graded according to the extent of tubular necrosis, based on the percentage of involvement of the kidney. Higher scores represent more severe damage (maximum score = 4): 0 = normal kidney; 1 = minimal necrosis, <5% involvement; 2 = mild necrosis, 5-25% involvement; 3 = moderate tubular necrosis, 25-75%
involvement; and 4 = severe, >75% involvement. Any other
pathology in addition to tubular necrosis that was noted is outlined in
Table 1. Nephrocalcinosis was the most
consistent finding in addition to tubular necrosis (Table 1). The BUN
and creatinine values at the time of harvesting of the control kidneys
in Table 1 were also the rats' preischemic and maximal values because
they had no further BUN and creatinine values after their kidneys were
removed.
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Echocardiography. At baseline, 2, 4, and 6 days of renal
failure, all animals underwent transthoracic echocardiography as previously described by our laboratory (17) to determine whether 1) cardiac dilation occurs in this model of ARF, and 2) vessel dilator has a beneficial effect on this cardiac dilation. The echocardiograms were performed with a high-resolution, small footprint neonatal transducer (7.0 mHz V7, Acuson, Mountainview, CA) with the
anesthetized rats lying in the lateral decubitus position. Measurements
were performed on two-dimensional, triggered-digitalized M-mode tracing
from the short axis of the left ventricle at the level of the papillary
muscles (resolution 250 µm). All measurements were performed on three
consecutive cardiac cycles. The left ventricular diameter during
systole (LVDs), left ventricular diameter during diastole (LVDd),
percent fractional shortening (%FS), posterior wall thickness at end
diastole and systole (PWTd and PWTs), outer ventricular diameter during
diastole (ODd), left ventricular ejection fraction (EF), and
interventricular septum thickness during diastole (IVSd) were measured
according to the standards for M-mode measurements set by the American
Society of Echocardiography (17). The value for %FS was obtained by
the following formula
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RESULTS |
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Renal function of ARF rats. There were 24 ARF rats in this
investigation. Seventeen rats that had ischemic renal failure (induced by removal of the right kidney and 50-min clamping of the left kidney
arterial supply) and that did not receive vessel dilator all developed
ARF, with their baseline BUN level of 16 ± 1 mg/dl increasing to 144 ± 6 mg/dl (P < 0.001) at 2 days postclamping (Fig.
1). Each of these control
renal failure rats continued in renal failure after placebo treatment
was begun on day 2 with their BUN levels at day 4 being
162 ± 4 mg/dl. At day 6 postischemia, 88% of the
animals died in ARF. The BUN levels of the animals that survived at 6 and 8 days were 182 ± 7 and 128 ± 6 mg/dl, respectively. The serum
creatinine levels in these ARF animals followed a similar pattern (Fig.
2). Thus their serum creatinine levels
increased from a preclamp value of 0.56 ± 0.5 mg/dl to 6.18 ± 0.39 mg/dl (P < 0.001) at day 2 postclamp and increased further to 8.17 ± 0.51 mg/dl at day 4 postclamp. By day
6, 88% of the ARF animals died, with the serum creatinine levels
in the surviving ARF animals being 4.16 ± 1.30 mg/dl at day 6 and 4.19 ± 1.40 mg/dl at day 8 postischemia. The sham
animals (n = 6) that did not have ischemia had no
significant change in BUN or creatinine levels over the 8-day
experimental period.
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The mortality percentage in the 17 ARF animals treated with saline only at day 2 postclamp was 0%, whereas at day 4 postclamp 29% of the animals had died in ARF. After 6 days of ARF, there was an 88% mortality with no further mortality through day 8. The weight of the animals with ARF declined from a preclamp weight of 226 ± 4 to 209 ± 5 g at day 2 postclamp and declined further to 194 ± 9 g at day 4 postclamp. At 6 days postrenal ischemia, the weight of the animals in renal failure was 160 ± 3 g, whereas at 8 days postclamp their weight averaged 165 ± 12 g, which was a 27% decrease in weight from their preclamp weight. The weight of six sham Sprague-Dawley rats increased 38 ± 6 g during this 8-day period, which was a 17% increase in weight.
Improvement of renal function in vessel dilator-treated ARF rats. The animals that received vessel dilator after 2 days of renal failure had similar preclamp BUN levels of 16 ± 1 mg/dl, which increased to 123 ± 16 mg/dl after 2 days of renal failure. Two days after vessel dilator treatment was begun (i.e., day 4 of Fig. 1), the BUN levels of these animals averaged 137 ± 33 mg/dl and then dramatically decreased at day 6 (i.e., 4 days after beginning vessel dilator) to 70 ± 18 mg/dl with a further decrease to 53 ± 17 mg/dl 6 days after placement of the vessel dilator pump (i.e., on day 8 of Fig. 1). The BUN levels of the ARF group treated with vessel dilator were 62% less (P < 0.01) at day 6 postischemia compared with the BUN levels of the untreated ARF animals.
The serum creatinine levels of the animals with renal failure that
received vessel dilator were 0.54 ± 0.03 mg/dl preclamp and 4.81 ± 0.67 mg/dl (P < 0.001) 2 days postischemic clamp. The serum
creatinine levels (5.17 ± 1.37 mg/dl) remained elevated 2 days after
placement of the vessel dilator pump (i.e., at day 4 postischemia) and then markedly decreased (P < 0.001)
at day 4 (1.72 ± 0.38 mg/dl) and day 6 (0.98 ± 0.12 mg/dl) after the pump placement (i.e., at days 6 and 8 of Fig. 2). The serum creatinine levels of the vessel dilator-treated
ARF group were 59 and 67% less (both at P < 0.01) on
days 6 and 8 postischemia compared with the
untreated group of ARF animals. One of the vessel dilator-treated ARF
animals was evaluated 10 days postischemia, and this animal's creatinine level decreased to 0.61 mg/dl, which was not significantly different from its preischemic serum creatinine level of 0.58 mg/dl.
One of the seven ARF animals treated with vessel dilator died on
day 6 of this investigation (i.e., 14% mortality during this
investigation). The decrease in mortality in the vessel dilator-treated ARF rats (i.e., 14%) was significant at P < 0.01 compared
with the placebo-treated ARF rats (i.e., 88%) when evaluated by a
Kaplan-Meir plot (Fig. 3).
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Influence of vessel dilator on the weight of ARF rats. The ARF animals that received vessel dilator at day 2 of renal failure had a similar decrease in weight from a baseline of 220 ± 3 g before clamping to 195 ± 3 g at day 2 and 184 ± 5 g at day 4 postischemic renal clamp, which was similar to the untreated ARF rats (8% decrease in weight in treated vs. 9% in untreated). The weight of the animals that received vessel dilator then stabilized (182 ± 9 g) 4 days after vessel dilator was begun, with the weights of five of six animals having further increased to 202 ± 15 g at day 8 postischemia (188 ± 15 g for whole group). The weights of the animals that received vessel dilator were significantly (P < 0.01) higher at day 8 of renal failure (92% of their original weight) than the weights of the animals that did not receive vessel dilator (73% of their original weight).
Vessel dilator increases urine excretion in ARF rats. The 24-h urine volume of the animals that had ARF induced by 50 min of ischemia doubled (P < 0.05) by day 2 of ARF to 14.1 ± 2.5 ml/24 h compared with their preischemic urine volumes of 6.8 ± 0.7 ml/24 h, suggesting that this was nonoliguric renal failure. The infusion of vessel dilator caused a diuresis with a further increase in urine volume to 20.0 ± 3.4 ml/24 h by day 2 of its infusion (P < 0.05).
Circulating concentration of vessel dilator before renal failure
induction and during renal failure with and without treatment. The
circulating concentration of vessel dilator increased fourfold (149 ± 54 vs. 35 ± 15 pg/ml, baseline; P < 0.05) within 30 min of
renal ischemia and was 10-fold higher (382 ± 130 pg/ml;
P < 0.01) 1 h after the ischemic event. At 24 h postrenal
ischemia, the circulating concentration of the vessel dilator
had increased ~27-fold (P < 0.001) and plateaued at this
level at 48 h postischemia. The circulating concentration was
~17-fold (P < 0.001) increased at 72 h postischemia
(Fig. 4). Infusion of vessel
dilator at the time of renal ischemia did not significantly
increase the circulating concentration of vessel dilator during the
first hour of postischemia above its renal failure-induced
increase. By 4 h of infusion the circulating concentration of vessel
dilator had doubled (791 ± 107 pg/ml; P < 0.05) in the ARF
animals that received vessel dilator versus the ARF animals that did
not receive vessel dilator (417 ± 37 pg/ml; Fig. 4). During the
remaining 72 h of infusion, the concentration of the vessel dilator in
the circulation was two- to threefold higher (P < 0.05) in
the animals with renal failure that received vessel dilator versus the
animals with renal failure that did not receive vessel dilator (Fig.
4). The concentration of vessel dilator excreted into the urine
increased in ARF from a baseline of 474 ± 61 pg/ml/24 h to 1,424 ± 111 pg/ml/24 h.
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Vessel dilator improves renal histology. The ARF animals that
did not receive vessel dilator had moderate (i.e., 25-75% of all
tubules involved) to severe (i.e., >75% of all tubules necrotic) acute tubular necrosis by day 8 after their ischemic event
(Fig. 5B). As shown in Fig. 5, the
tubules of this animal (animal 3 in Table 1) are almost
completely destroyed. The destruction of the tubules included both the
proximal and distal tubules with the proximal tubules being more
severely affected (Fig. 5B). The ARF animals also had evidence
of nephrocalcinosis. The glomerulus of the ARF animals was spared
compared with tubules with glomeruls appearing to be normal (Fig.
5B). The histology in the ARF animals correlated very closely
with their renal function as observed in Table 1 where the histology of
individual ARF animals and their respective renal function are
delineated. At the time that these kidneys were harvested from the
animals that did not receive vessel dilator their BUN levels averaged
174 ± 21 mg/dl with creatinine levels of 8.93 ± 2.6 mg/dl
(Table 1).
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The addition of vessel dilator after renal failure had been present for 2 days resulted in a marked improvement in the renal histology with scores ranging from 0 (i.e., no tubular necrosis) to 1+ (i.e., <5% of the tubules involved) (Table 1). When the kidneys were examined at day 8 of renal failure, the brush borders of the proximal tubules of the ARF animals treated with vessel dilator were present (Fig. 5C),which was similar to the proximal tubules of healthy animals (Fig. 5A). The presence of brush borders in the vessel dilator-treated animals (Fig. 5C) was distinctly different from the ARF animals not treated with vessel dilator where the brush borders of the tubules have been destroyed (Fig. 5B). The glomeruli of vessel dilator-treated ARF animals also appear normal (Fig. 5C). At the time the kidneys were harvested, the renal failure of the animals treated with vessel dilator correlated with the dramatic improvement in renal histology with the average BUN and creatinine levels being 34 ± 10 and 0.78 ± 0.14 mg/dl, respectively (Table 1). It should be pointed out that the animals treated with vessel dilator did have severe renal failure (see maximal BUN and creatinine levels in Table 1) before vessel dilator was begun on the second day of renal failure. The vessel dilator-treated animals that had some tubular necrosis (i.e., grade 1, <5% involvement) also had some nephrocalcinosis as in the untreated ARF animals, whereas the vessel dilator-treated ARF animals whose histology appeared to normalize (i.e., grade 0) did not have any nephrocalcinosis (Table 1).
Echocardiographic parameters of hemodynamic function in treated and
untreated ARF rats. Heart rate of the rats in ARF significantly (P < 0.05) decreased by day 4 of ARF from their
baseline heart rates before renal ischemia (Table
2). The infusion of vessel dilator did not
have a significant effect on heart rate (Table 2). The left ventricular
end-systolic and end-diastolic diameters were significantly (P < 0.05) increased in the ARF rats at day 4 of their renal
failure compared with their prerenal ischemia diameters (Table
2). Infusion of vessel dilator significantly (P < 0.05)
decreased both the left ventricular end-systolic and end-diastolic
diameters (Table 2). The posterior wall thickness during diastole and
systole of the animals with renal failure was not different from before
their renal ischemia (Table 2). Infusion of vessel dilator had
no effect on the posterior wall thickness of the animals in renal
failure. The outer ventricular diameter increased with
renal failure, and the infusion of vessel dilator, in turn, decreased
the outer ventricular diameter to that of healthy animals (Table 2).
The interventricular septum thickness did not change with renal failure
or with the vessel dilator infusion (Table 2). Fractional shortening
(%) was decreased in the ARF rats consistent with depressed left
ventricular systolic function, but this did not reach a level of
statistical significance (Table 2). The ejection fraction of the ARF
rats decreased significantly (P < 0.05) at day 4 of
renal failure (Table 2). Infusion of vessel dilator improved the
ejection fraction to the extent that the ejection fraction of the
vessel dilator-treated ARF rats was not any different from that of
healthy rats (Table 1). Figure 6
illustrates a typical echocardiogram of a Sprague-Dawley rat before the
induction of renal ischemia followed by an echocardiogram after
2 days of renal failure and a third echocardiogram after 2 days of
treatment with vessel dilator.
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DISCUSSION |
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Progressive renal injury with necrosis of the proximal tubules and tubular occlusion with casts have been demonstrated to occur in the rat after ischemia secondary to arterial clamping (16). Usually this model has the potential for reversible renal failure when the ischemia is limited to 45-60 min, whereas longer periods of ischemia universally result in irreversible injury (16). In the present investigation it was found that with 30 min of ischemia (n = 10), over 50% of the ARF animals spontaneously recovered from ARF over a period of 8 days. Vessel dilator did cause significant (P < 0.01) improvement in renal function in the 30-min ischemia ARF model (data not shown). However, because of the spontaneous recovery when only 30 min of ischemia was utilized, it was difficult to discern whether the recovery of renal function with the addition of vessel dilator was due to vessel dilator itself or if it was a spontaneous recovery not associated with treatment. Sixty minutes of ischemia, on the other hand, was associated with a large early mortality of 40% at 2 days of ARF (i.e., before placement of osmotic pumps) and 90% mortality when the ARF animals were followed for 8 days postischemia (n = 10; data not shown). Seven animals with 50 min of ischemia had 0% mortality after 2 days of ARF, 29% mortality after 4 days of ARF, and 88% mortality at day 8 (Fig. 3). Although there was some improvement in renal function in the 50-min ischemic model of the ARF in three of the animals at 8 days postischemia, the BUN did not decrease below 65 mg/dl in any of these animals. One of these 50-min ischemia ARF animals did have a serum creatinine level decrease to 0.86 mg/dl, which was not significantly different from its preischemic serum creatinine. (This animal's creatinine had reached a maximum of 3.08 mg/dl on day 2 postischemia.) The 50 min of ischemia thus produces severe renal failure with no early mortality (i.e., 2 days) but high (88%) mortality after 8 days of ARF. (Evaluation of 40 and 45 min of ischemia revealed results similar to the 50 min of ischemia.) The present arterial clamping model of ARF is a model of nonoliguric renal failure, because urine output doubled at day 4 of renal failure compared with urine output of the same animals before their renal ischemic event.
The addition of vessel dilator 2 days after ARF had been established resulted in amelioration of the renal failure as evidenced by the marked decrease in BUN and serum creatinine levels in the vessel dilator-treated animals. It should be noted that the serum creatinine and BUN levels of the ARF animals did not decrease immediately or within the first 2 days of vessel dilator treatment. By 4 days after beginning vessel dilator treatment, there was, however, a marked decrease in the BUN and serum creatinine levels, suggesting an improvement in renal function. The ARF animals that received vessel dilator lost weight initially similar to the control ARF animals. Simultaneous with their improvement in BUN and creatinine, the weights of the vessel dilator-treated ARF animals began to increase. This increase in weight in the vessel dilator-treated animals suggests overall improvement in the health of the vessel dilator-treated rats because the ARF rats that did not receive vessel dilator continued to lose weight.
There was a decrease in mortality with vessel dilator treatment. One of the ARF animals treated with vessel dilator died at day 6 of this investigation. Thus the mortality decreased to 14% with vessel dilator from 88% without vessel dilator treatment at day 6 of ARF. The 88% mortality indicates that this is a model of severe renal failure and suggests that vessel dilator is effective when severe renal failure has been established for several days.
In the present investigation of renal failure the endogenous circulating concentration of vessel dilator increased in the circulation similar to what has been noted previously in humans (29). The endogenous increase in vessel dilator was associated with an increase in water excretion in the present investigation. Water excretion doubled in the ARF animals that did not receive exogenously administered vessel dilator. Thus the endogenous increase in vessel dilator secondary to renal failure helps improve the water retention accompanying renal failure by causing a diuresis. This endogenous increase in vessel dilator, however, does not appear to protect ARF subjects from the high (40-60%) mortality currently observed even with hemodialysis treatment (10). The diuresis secondary to the endogenous increase of vessel dilator in ARF suggests that endogenous vessel dilator is biologically active in ARF.
Increasing the circulating concentration of vessel dilator further two- to threefold (Fig. 4) via exogenous administration of vessel dilator, however, did cause improvement in the ARF similar to its beneficial effects in the treatment of congestive heart failure (24). In congestive heart failure analogous to ARF, vessel dilator increases in the circulation proportional to the severity of sodium and water retention (30). The exogenous addition of vessel dilator to humans with severe congestive heart failure enhances sodium and water excretion as well as has beneficial hemodynamic effects (24). The exogenous addition of vessel dilator also enhances water excretion in nonoliguric renal failure animals as demonstrated in the present investigation. Vessel dilator in this investigation was given via an implanted peritoneal pump that was not directly attached to the venous or arterial system. The increase in the measured concentration of vessel dilator in the circulation, therefore, indicates that vessel dilator in the abdominal cavity does reach the circulation via the peritoneum.
The addition of vessel dilator was associated with a remarkable improvement in renal histology in the ARF animals (Fig. 5). The amount of acute tubular necrosis decreased to <5% in all animals treated with vessel dilator (and in some cases there was no evidence of acute tubular necrosis) versus >25% in all of the untreated ARF animals. In one-third of the untreated ARF animals >75% of all the tubules were necrotic (Table 1). This improvement in renal histology correlated directly with renal failure, i.e., BUN and creatinine, at the time of harvesting of the respective kidneys (Table 1). These findings would suggest that the improvement in renal failure attributed to vessel dilator is at least partially due to the ability of vessel dilator to decrease the amount of damage to the renal tubules and/or help in their regeneration after acute ischemic injury. With respect to the mechanism by which vessel dilator helps regenerate injured tubules, it is important to note that in the renal histology there was nephrocalcinosis present in addition to tubular damage in the untreated ARF rats. In the vessel dilator-treated rats, the animals with apparent complete recovery of their tubules (i.e., no necrotic tubules) had no nephrocalcinosis, whereas the treated kidneys with 5% or less tubular damage (i.e., grade 1) did have nephrocalcinosis present. These findings offer several insights into ARF in rats. First, one needs very little tubular damage (i.e., <5%) to have nephrocalcinosis, which develops very early in ARF. Autoradiography studies to localize 45Ca reveal that calcium doubles in necrotic proximal tubules 1 day after renal injury and is maximal (6-fold increased) at 3 days postinjury (27). This rapid development of nephrocalcinosis appears specific to rats because nephrocalcinosis is usually not seen within 3 days of developing ARF in humans. It has been suggested that part of the reason is that rats are often fed a high phosphorous diet (1.4%), with phosphorous leading to calcium-phosphate deposition within the kidney, resulting in nephrocalcinosis (13). In the present study the amount of phosphate in the normal rat chow diet was 1%, which may have contributed to the nephrocalcinosis.
Other atrial natriuretic peptides investigated to treat ARF have each resulted in severe hypotension and bradycardia (2, 19). For example, ANF resulted in 46% of renal failure patients becoming hypotensive (2). Urodilatin, a four amino acid extension of ANF that is formed mainly in the distal tuble of the kidney (18), has been suggested as a possible treatment of renal failure (20), and this peptide has also been associated with severe hypotension and bradycardia when given as a potential treatment of congestive heart failure (9). Vessel dilator, on the other hand, has never caused a hypotensive episode when given to either healthy animals or humans (14, 25, 26) or when given to humans with sodium and water retention (24).
Stretch of the atria is the main stimulus to the increased release of vessel dilator and ANF (from the same prohormone) in healthy animals and humans (23). In one salt and water-retaining animal model, i.e., the aortocaval fistula model of volume overload congestive heart failure, there is marked dilation of ventricles measured by echocardiography and upregulation of the gene that expresses vessel dilator (17). The present echocardiographic findings in the ARF animals suggest a similar mechanism for the increase in vessel dilator in the circulation with ischemic renal failure. With induction of acute ischemic renal failure, the left ventricular end-systolic and end-diastolic chambers and outer ventricular diameter increased significantly (Table 2). An increase in the ventricular diameter of the heart has been associated with increased expression of the ANP prohormone gene within the ventricle of the heart, resulting in an increased concentration of vessel dilator in the circulation (17). The present echocardiographic-documented dilation of the left ventricle with ARF thus helps to explain the endogenously measured increase of vessel dilator within the circulation after renal ischemia (Fig. 4). Of interest, infusion of vessel dilator reversed this ARF-induced dilation of the left ventricle when examined by echocardiography.
The increase of vessel dilator in the circulation with induction of ARF could also be partially contributed to by increased synthesis of vessel dilator by the kidney secondary to ischemic stress. The kidney is known to synthesize vessel dilator, which occurs mainly in the distal tubules (18). One could envision ischemia within the kidney-enhancing renal ANP prohormone gene expression, resulting in increased vessel dilator concentrations within the kidney for potential release into the circulation (22, 23). It has been demonstrated that if one removes the right kidney and then infarcts two-thirds of the left kidney, that ANP prohormone gene expression increases fivefold in this kidney at 4 days postinfarction (22). This knowledge suggests that the increase of vessel dilator in the circulation at 4 days of ARF found in the present investigation may have been also partially secondary to increased ANP prohormone gene expression within the kidney.
In summary, vessel dilator improves renal function (BUN and creatinine) and decreases mortality from 88 to 14% when given intraperitoneally 2 days after established ischemic ARF. Acute tubular necrosis is <5% in vessel dilator-treated rats compared with 25% to >75% (one-third of animals) in placebo-treated ARF animals. Transthoracic echocardiography revealed left ventricular dilation was one contributing mechanism to the increase of vessel dilator in the circulation with ARF. Vessel dilator infusion reversed this left ventricular dilation. This investigation indicates that vessel dilator improves acute tubular necrosis and renal function in established ARF.
In perspective, the ability of vessel dilator to ameliorate ARF and preserve renal tubules even when given 2 days after renal failure has been established is clinically important, because physicians are often not present at the time of renal injury. The present investigation demonstrates that vessel dilator has beneficial effects in ARF when given via a pump intraperitoneally, leading one to speculate that in future clinical therapeutic trials it may possibly be given via intraperitoneal dialysate. The multiple mechanisms of vessel dilator for the improvement of ARF (i.e., diuretic agent, prostaglandin E2 synthesis enhancer, Na+-K+-ATPase inhibitor, and vasodilator) suggest that vessel dilator may be a useful addition to the treatment of ARF, especially in light of its demonstrated beneficial effects on tubules exposed to ischemia.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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We thank Charlene Pennington and Rose M. Overton for excellent secretarial and technical assistance, respectively. We thank Charles Q. Celevin for the superb preparation and processing of the histology slides. We also thank Drs. Hamid Rabb and John R. Dietz for helpful advice on the ARF model in rats.
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FOOTNOTES |
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This investigation was supported in part by a Merit Review Grant from the United States Department of Veterans Affairs and a grant-in-aid from the American Heart Association, Florida Affiliate.
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. §1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: D. L. Vesely, Atrial Natriuretic Peptides Research Laboratories, J. A. Haley Veterans Hospital-151, 13000 Bruce B. Downs Blvd., Tampa, Florida 33612.
Received 24 August 1999; accepted in final form 11 November 1999.
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