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Query: UMLS:C0022672 (acute tubular necrosis)
2,175 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This review concerns the present state of accomplishments in the study of SEM of human and experimental renal disease. Critical techniques of specimen preparation reviewed include perfusion fixation, razor tissue sectioning, alcohol cryofracture, microtome sectioning of paraffin or styrene embedded tissue, ultraplaning with glass knives of hard carbowax embedded tissues and glomerular isolation. Gold-palladium coating and heavy metal impregnation with osmium, uranium, and silver are discussed. A compendium of SEM observations of human glomerular, vascular and tubular disease is presented. Techniques for SEM of experimental renal disease are reviewed. These include latex vascular injection, freeze drying, x-ray microanalysis and use of backscattered electron imaging. Experimental models previously investigated by SEM are puromycin aminonucleoside nephrosis, daunomycin nephrosis, and N,N1-Diacetylbenzedine glomerulopathy, nephrotoxic serum nephritis, and protamine perfusion glomerulopathy. Reviewed are acute tubular necrosis caused either by angiotensin, hypotension, norepinephrine, glycerol, mercury, and unilateral renal artery occlusion, also potassium depletion nephropathy, alloxan diabetes and diphenylamine-induced polycystic disease.
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PMID:SEM of human and experimental renal disease. 52 33

Scanning (SEM) and transmission (TEM) electron microscopy were used to elucidate morphological changes associated with acute tubular necrosis induced by high doses of mercuric chloride. Marked morphological changes were demonstrated in proximal tubules with TEM at one hour and with both SEM and TEM at six hours. These changes appeared earlier than reported in previous studies using any dose. The scanning microscopic provided a three-dimensional view of proximal cells showing changes in early injury with subsequent separation of the injured cells from the remaining cells. Certain of these residual cells change into low-lying cells with reline the proximal tubule. Variability was seen in the number of residual cells. However, once cell injury was initiated, necrosis proceeded in a reproducible manner.
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PMID:Scanning and transmission electron microscopy of mercuric chloride-induced acute tubular necrosis in rat kidney. 80 31

Acute, usually reversible, renal failure has been observed in patients with normal or minimally altered glomeruli on renal biopsy. This review aims to examine the clinical features of acute renal failure in these patients and to evaluate factors that may contribute to the reduction in glomerular filtration rate (GFR). In an analysis of 79 cases affecting 75 patients reported in the English literature since 1966, with acute renal failure associated with minimal change disease or mild histopathological changes in glomeruli, the average age was 58 +/- 2 years (mean +/- 5 SEM), urine protein excretion 11.6 +/- 0.6 g/d, and serum albumin level 19 +/- 1 g/L (1.9 +/- 0.1 g/dL). Acute renal failure was documented an average of 29 +/- 5 days after onset of nephrotic syndrome, and persisted for 7 weeks in 62 episodes in the 58 patients in whom recovery of renal function occurred. Fourteen patients died of uremia or required chronic dialysis, and 3 were lost to follow-up. Although plasma volume depletion was sometimes cited as the cause of renal failure, objective signs of hypovolemia were not documented and most patients did not improve after treatment designed to correct volume deficits. In contrast, histopathological changes consistent with acute tubular necrosis (ATN) were observed in at least 60% of cases. Since the pathogenesis of acute renal failure in minimal change nephrotic syndrome is unknown, we evaluated hemodynamic determinants of GFR in patients with minimal change disease with normal or near-normal renal function, and in relevant animal models, to obtain insights into the effect of nephrotic syndrome on GFR. Although acute renal failure is uncommon, GFR is reduced concurrently with nephrotic syndrome in approximately 30% of children and adults. Absolute and effective blood volume and renal plasma flow are relatively well preserved. However, clinical and experimental observations suggest that the glomerular ultrafiltration coefficient may be reduced by as much as 50%. These findings, together with renal biopsy changes in cases with acute renal failure, suggest that severe reductions in GFR in some patients with minimal change nephrotic syndrome may result from an interaction between acute ischemic tissue injury and preexisting intrinsic renal abnormalities.
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PMID:Reversible renal failure in the nephrotic syndrome. 155 65

In order to determine the relationships between allograft function and the recipient's plasma concentrations of atrial natriuretic factor (ANF), plasma ANF was measured by radioimmunoassay for 14 days after cadaveric renal transplantation in 9 patients aged 19-64 years. All received immunosuppression with prednisolone, azathioprine, and cyclosporine. No patient was in heart failure. During the study period, six grafts functioned, and three were nonfunctioning--two due to rejection and one to acute tubular necrosis. Plasma ANF concentration at the time of transplantation was 48 +/- 16 pmol/L (mean +/- SEM) range 15-145 pmol/L. In the six patients with functioning grafts, ANF declined in parallel with the fall in serum creatinine (658 +/- 35 to 210 +/- 34 mumol/L). In the three with nonfunctioning grafts, serum creatinine and plasma ANF concentration both increased. There was overall a significant linear relation between serum creatinine and plasma ANF (r = 0.527, P less than 0.001). The changes in plasma ANF after renal transplantation bore no relationship to changes in body weight or blood pressure. However, plasma ANF concentration was related to allograft fractional sodium excretion (r = 0.687, p less than 0.001). We conclude that elevated plasma ANF concentrations in end-stage renal disease are restored to normal by successful renal transplantation, implying that renal function is a determinant of plasma ANF concentration. Circulating plasma ANF may also have a direct effect on allograft sodium excretion.
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PMID:Plasma atrial natriuretic factor and graft function in renal transplant recipients. 253 Jun 66

Monitoring of immunoglobulin-secreting cells in peripheral blood was performed in 88 renal transplant recipients using a reverse hemolytic plaque-forming cell assay. Comparison with other in vitro tests for rejection (plasma neopterin, CD4/CD8 ratio) demonstrated that the number of immunoglobulin-secreting cells in peripheral blood provides a highly sensitive rejection marker. Evidence of rejection was obtained 1.7 +/- 0.4 (mean +/- SEM) days before a rise in creatinine, with a significant PFC rise in 95% (73/77) of rejection episodes. The PFC response was not influenced by HLA matching, number of preoperative blood transfusions, acute tubular necrosis, or uremia. A significant PFC rise in the absence of an ongoing rejection episode occurred in the presence of bacterial or viral infections, in case of posttransplant surgical complications, and regularly during the early posttransplant period (days 4-9). However, even early posttransplant the PFC peak was significantly higher in patients with an ongoing rejection episode than in patients without rejection (P less than 0.001).
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PMID:B lymphocyte response as an indicator of acute renal transplant rejection. I. Immunoglobulin-secreting cells in peripheral blood. 257 82

Postoperative intrarenal pressure measurements may be an aid to the diagnosis of acute renal transplant rejection, especially in patients treated with cyclosporine. Serial measurements of intrarenal pressure were made in 38 recipients using a fine-needle technique. Thirty-two intraoperative and 207 postoperative measurements were made, and 39 clinical rejection episodes (23 confirmed by biopsy) monitored. Intraoperative pressures in grafts with immediate function (37.4 +/- 4.0 mmHg, mean +/- SEM) were not significantly different from those with delayed function (30.9 +/- 4.8 mmHg), whereas postoperative pressures were greater (P less than 0.01) in kidneys with acute tubular necrosis (29.4 +/- 1.9 mmHg) than in functioning grafts (20.4 +/- 0.9 mmHg). Pressures recorded during clinical rejection episodes (44.3 +/- 2.3 mmHg) exceeded (P less than 0.001) those during quiescent periods (23.6 +/- 1.0 mmHg). During rejection episodes, higher pressures (P less than 0.01) were recorded from tender or palpably enlarged grafts (52.5 +/- 3.0 mmHg) than in the absence of these signs (36.3 +/- 3.1 mmHg), and patients whose transplants biopsies showed cellular rejection tended to have greater pressures (50.1 +/- 4.1 mmHg) than those with concomitant vasculopathy (36.4 +/- 3.9 mmHg), but the latter did not reach statistical significance. In 7 cases of cyclosporine toxicity the intrarenal pressure was 17.8 +/- 4.2 mmHg. Using a diagnostic cut off point of 40 mmHg, the investigation failed to recognize 26% of acute rejection episodes--and, in the presence of acute tubular necrosis, it wrongly categorized 21% of nonrejectors. While its predictive capacity was limited, the test may occasionally be helpful in the differentiation of cyclosporine toxicity and rejection in functioning kidneys.
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PMID:An assessment of intrarenal hydrostatic pressure measurements in the diagnosis of acute renal allograft rejection. 351 46

Rejection of an allograft usually is preceded by activation of T lymphocytes, in which state such cells may be identified by their ability to form thermostable rosettes with sheep erythrocytes (TE-R). The objective of the present work, therefore, was to determine whether or not enumeration of TE-R in the peripheral blood was of any value in the diagnosis of rejection. The results showed no significant differences between TE-R (mean +/- SEM) in normal subjects (9.9 +/- 1.3; n = 25), renal allograft recipients without rejections (13.5 +/- 1.7; n = 5) and in patients who suffered from acute tubular necrosis in the posttransplant period (12.4 +/- 2.5; n = 8). In contrast, recipients who had rejection episodes showed a marked rise in TE-R levels (43.0 +/- 4.0; n = 11) about two to seven days prior to the diagnosis of rejection by clinical and chemical criteria. Furthermore, TE-R remained high if the rejection episodes turned out to be irreversible after therapy (42.2 +/- 3.7) but fell if the episodes were reversible (19.9 +/- 3.2). TE-R values were elevated in patients with chronic renal failure on maintenance hemodialysis (45.7 +/- 4.9; n = 23). Neither acute dialytic runs or acute infections altered TE-R values. In conclusion, those results show that enumeration of TE-R may be helpful in the early diagnosis of allograft rejection, before clinical and chemical stigmata are apparent.
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PMID:Thermostable erythrocyte rosettes in chronic renal failure and allograft rejection. 635 76

Techniques applied in SEM studies of a solid organ such as the kidney are reviewed. The tissue can be prepared by razor sectioning, ethanol cryofracture and ultraplanning of polyethylene glycol embedded tissue. Tissues embedded in paraffin can also be used. Glomeruli and tubuli can be isolated from renal biopsies. A new procedure for tubular isolation is based on sequential digestion by trypsin, pepsin and Pronase E. SEM examination has proved useful in a number of renal diseases, such as glomerular diseases, hypertensive renal disease, an tubular diseases, including medullary cystic disease, adult polycystic disease, and acute tubular necrosis. Particularly in human acute tubular necrosis, SEM was helpful. SEM has also contributed to the study of the physiologically important basal-lateral surfaces of human, dog, rat, rabbit and frog renal tubules, and in particular allowed the elucidation of patterns of processes on the basal-lateral surfaces of proximal S1, S2, and S3 tubular segments, thin limbs, distal ascending and convoluted limbs and collecting ducts in human tubules.
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PMID:The complementary role of scanning electron microscopy in renal pathological diagnosis. 641 8

On their surface, renal tubular cells present intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) during acute renal allograft rejection. We propose that the extent of ICAM-1 expression by renal tubular cells can be estimated from urine immunocytology. To test this hypothesis, we obtained 52 samples of urine from 31 renal transplant recipients with either acute tubular necrosis, rejection or stable renal function. Cytocentrifuged aliquots of urinary sediment were incubated with monoclonal antibodies to ICAM-1 in an avidin-biotin-peroxidase technique. To corroborate our findings, biopsy specimens were obtained for conventional and immunohistology one hour following vascular anastomosis and during rejection episodes. The proportion of renal tubular cells that expressed ICAM-1 was low in patients with acute tubular necrosis (23.8 +/- 3.6%) and high in patients with rejection (53.1 +/- 4.4% [SEM]) (P < .001). In 11 patients who recovered from rejection, the proportion of ICAM-1-positive renal tubular cells decreased from 55.9 +/- 5.6% to 25.5 +/- 4.3% (P < .05). In two patients who initially had acute tubular necrosis and then rejected their transplants, the expression of ICAM-1 on renal tubular cells tended to increase (from 27.5 +/- 2.5% to 60.0 +/- 20.0%, P = .12). In eight patients with acute tubular necrosis who never rejected their transplants, ICAM-1 expression remained low (23.1 +/- 3.8%). Immunocytology correlated well with immunohistology and the clinical diagnosis. Our findings suggest that urine immunocytology may be useful in monitoring adhesion molecule expression by renal tubular cells.
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PMID:Analysis of adhesion molecule expression by tubular epithelial cells using urine immunocytology. 776 29

Glutathione transferase-pi released from kidney tubular epithelial cells was analyzed in the urine of recipients of renal allografts. Urinary content of alpha-class glutathione transferase was also determined for comparison. Control urine from healthy individuals contained detectable levels of the pi-isoenzyme (6.6 +/- 0.46 ng/ml, mean +/- SEM) and this concentration was not increased in the urine of patients demonstrating cyclosporine A-induced nephrotoxicity (6.3 +/- 0.29 ng/ml), in contrast to the alpha-form. Acute rejection increased excretion of the pi-isoenzyme (19.0 +/- 2.0 ng/ml), but not of the alpha-glutathione transferase. Thus, while the serum creatinine level increases in connection with both cyclosporine A-induced nephrotoxicity and acute rejection, analyses of urinary glutathione transferases distinguish well between these conditions. Acute tubular necrosis and renal transplant infarction resulted in a rapid elevation in urinary levels of both alpha- and pi-transferase. The advantages of this approach are that release of the protein into the urine occurs rapidly after tubular damage, the assay is sensitive and specific and can also distinguish between certain pathological conditions. These studies thus indicate that the urinary level of glutathione transferase-pi can be used for monitoring certain pathological processes in the kidney. Quantitation of this enzyme complements the information obtained by measurement of glutathione transferase-alpha.
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PMID:Urinary pi-class glutathione transferase as an indicator of tubular damage in the human kidney. 793 21


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