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

We have previously shown that the rat with experimental diabetes (DM) of 4-6 months' duration exhibits complete functional and morphologic protection against gentamicin-induced acute renal failure. To assess the role of the duration of the diabetic state per se on the resistance to gentamicin, female Sprague-Dawley rats with diabetes of short (5 days, n = 7), intermediate (5 weeks, n = 5) and long duration (5 months, n = 7) were studied. Diabetes was induced by streptozotocin, 50-65 mg/kg b.w. i.v. Controls were identically treated sex- and age matched nondiabetic rats. The animals were kept in individual metabolic cages for 2 weeks and all received gentamicin 40 mg/kg/day for 9 days. Sham animals (DM and control) received Ringer's solution in place of gentamicin. Prior to gentamicin, plasma glucose levels and creatinine clearances (Ccr) were higher in the DM long duration group (619 +/- 25 (SE) mg/dl; 2.6 +/- 0.2 ml/min, respectively) than in the DM short (514 +/- 24; 2.0 +/- 0.1) and DM intermediate duration (442 +/- 30; 2.1 +/- 0.1) groups, while urine volume and glycosuria were similar. Following gentamicin the three control groups developed acute renal failure (maximal decrease in Ccr of 60 +/- 7, 72 +/- 9 and 71 +/- 7%, respectively; p less than 0.01 to less than 0.001), lysozymuria and acute tubular necrosis. There were no significant differences in the degree of renal impairment observed among the three control groups. In marked contrast, in the three DM groups these changes were absent and the renal cortical gentamicin content was lower than that of the control groups.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Effect of duration of diabetes on the protection observed in the diabetic rat against gentamicin-induced acute renal failure. 672 8

Rats with untreated diabetes mellitus are protected from gentamicin-induced nephrotoxicity. In order to evaluate the role of hyperglycemia, glycosuria, and polyuria in this phenomenon, miniosmotic pumps filled with insulin were implanted for 15 days in seven female Sprague-Dawley rats with streptozotocin-induced diabetes mellitus. Plasma glucose levels were successfully maintained under 126 mg/dl. To serve as the control group, eight age-matched diabetic (plasma glucose > 400 mg/dl) rats had miniosmotic pumps placed delivering only Ringer's solution. Six days after placement of the pumps, gentamicin (40 mg/Kg/day) was administered to all animals for 9 days. The insulin-treated diabetic rats exhibited clear signs of nephrotoxicity by Day 6 of gentamicin, whereas the diabetic control group remained free from any functional or morphological evidence of proximal tubular damage throughout the 9 days of the aminoglycoside administration. At the end of the experiment, the creatinine clearance in the insulin-treated diabetic group was 45% lower than in the untreated diabetic group (P < 0.005). In addition, there was a rise in plasma creatinine (P < 0.02), muramidase appeared in the urine, and mild patchy acute tubular necrosis of the renal cortex was observed by light microscopic examination. The insulin-treated group also accumulated more gentamicin in the renal cortex than the untreated animals (P < 0.005). It is concluded that protection against the nephrotoxic effects of gentamicin is a feature of untreated experimental diabetes mellitus in the rat and that correction of the hyperglycemic state with insulin reverses this resistance.
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PMID:Insulin reverses the protection given by diabetes against gentamicin nephrotoxicity in the rat. 807 55

The incidence of acute tubular necrosis ATN after cadaveric kidney transplantation in our centre has been in the range of 50%. A prospective study was carried out in 1991 and 1992 to assess the effect of in situ perfusion and hypothermic storage of kidneys harvested from brain-dead haemodynamically stable and unstable donors. Three litres of Ringer's solution were used for in situ perfusion. In 40 cases, the kidneys were stored in Euro-Collins (EC) solution and in the other 78 cases, in University of Wisconsin (UW) solution. Among the factors that could contribute to ATN, we analysed warm ischaemia time, anastomosis time and cold storage time. Function was considered to be delayed if the patient required posttransplantation dialysis. The donors were considered haemodynamically unstable when hypotension before harvesting was present (BP < 70 mm Hg over 2 h) despite high doses (> 15 microg/kg per minute) of dopamine or when cardiac arrest occurred at the time of harvesting and oliguria had been present for at least 2 h. Haemodynamically stable donors with a BP greater than 80 mm Hg had a normal diuresis. In all donors in this group the dose of dopamine was lower than 10 microg/kg per minute. The study showed that storage in UW solution did not influence the incidence of ATN in kidneys harvested from haemodynamically unstable donors. Differences observed in our study were due to haemodynamic status preceding donor nephrectomy and length of cold storage time.
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PMID:In situ perfusion and UW solution used for storage did not decrease the incidence of ATN in kidneys harvested from hemodynamically unstable donors. 1127 Dec 84