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Query: UMLS:C0920646 (
renal ischemia
)
2,515
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
So far two methods for prolonging the tolerance of
renal ischemia
are available: 1) surface cooling with crushed ice and 2) perfusion cooling with an extracellular-like solution. Both methods use only the principle of reducing metabolism through cooling. While rewarming during surgery the ischemic protection is lost, or the kidney must be cooled once again. Therefore, a new preservation solution should reduce energy consumption due to its composition in addition to cooling. For open heart surgery, the HTK solution by Bretschneider is already used clinically. In 71 dog kidney experiments, the ischemic time kidneys could tolerate was prolonged by this solution from 15 to 120 min at 35 degrees C and from 45 to 360 min at 25 degrees C. After 2 h of ischemia at 30 degrees C glomerular filtration rate was about 20 ml/min.100gww within 3 h of reperfusion. After six postoperative days the filtration rate was 40 ml/min.100 gww. No ischemic damage could be recognized by histological investigations. The clinical effectiveness of this method was shown in 7 clinical applications. Ischemic duration lasted up to 113 min, and blood creatinine was between 0.8 and 2.4 mg% at the 6th postoperative day. Use of this preservation technique thus leads to improved kidney function immediately following operation. Longer ischemia can be tolerated by a kidney thus protected, and using this technique excellent visibility can be achieved during intrarenal surgery, simplifying, for example,
tumor
extirpation.
...
PMID:A new method for conservative renal surgery--experimental and first clinical results. 212 22
The use of cardiopulmonary bypass, deep hypothermia and circulatory arrest has decreased the risks of hemorrhage,
tumor
embolization, incomplete thrombus resection, and warm hepatic and
renal ischemia
associated with resection of renal cell carcinoma extending into the inferior vena cava above the hepatic veins. Patients about to undergo this operation frequently have significant coronary artery and carotid artery disease, and are at risk for perioperative myocardial infarction and stroke. Preoperative evaluation of the coronary artery and carotid artery circulation by coronary angiography, duplex carotid artery scan and digital subtraction carotid angiography is recommended. Depending upon the severity and location of the cardiovascular disease a sequential or simultaneous operation may be performed. This surgical approach can be used in selected patients to facilitate complete
tumor
thrombectomy with a low operative risk.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular evaluation before circulatory arrest for removal of vena caval extension of renal carcinoma. 272 26
Unilateral parenchymatous kidney disease associated with high blood pressure represents a potentially curable form of hypertension. Surgery may normalize blood pressure in a substantial number of these patients. Curable renal parenchymatous hypertension includes unilateral tubulointerstitial kidney diseases such as chronic pyelonephritis, reflux nephropathy, segmental hypoplasia and radiation nephritis, hydronephrosis, simple renal cysts, traumatic kidney lesions and renal tumors associated with high blood pressure.
Renal ischemia
and in turn activation of the renin angiotensin system is involved in the pathogenesis of hypertension in most of these patients. In patients with unilateral kidney disease and hypertension, both an operative and a medical therapeutic approach have a high success rate. Good candidates for nephrectomy are young patients with severe hypertension, strict unilateral disease, normal plasma creatinine levels and minimal function of the involved kidney. In unilateral hydronephrosis reconstructive surgery or nephrectomy may cure or improve hypertension in the vast majority of the patients. Surgically correctable hypertension has also been reported in some patients with large renal cysts and renal tumors (hemangiopericytoma, Wilm's tumor, hypernephroma, renal pelvic
tumor
).
...
PMID:Curable renal parenchymatous hypertension: current diagnosis and management. 390 29
The potential of using fast magnetic resonance (MR) imaging in conjunction with apnea-induced blood deoxygenation for the noninvasive monitoring of relative perfusion in the rat abdomen has been studied with two experimental models: glycerol-induced focal
renal ischemia
and transplanted liver
tumor
. Gradient-echo echo-planar imaging (GRE-EPI) (TE of 20 msec at 2T) of liver and kidney was performed before, during, and after a 60-second apnea episode and then was followed in the same rat by contrast-enhanced (a) GRE-EPI and (b) T1-weighted spin-echo imaging (TR msec/TE msec = 200/6) with polylysine-(gadolinium-DTPA [diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid]). The results indicate that a noninvasive vascular challenge due to apnea can be used for the detection of focal tissue perfusion abnormalities in rat kidney and liver
tumor
.
...
PMID:MR imaging of blood oxygenation-dependent changes in focal renal ischemia and transplanted liver tumor in rat. 832 7
We describe a 17-year-old hypertensive man with a left abdominal mass on the computed tomographic scan. Radiologic studies revealed a large
tumor
near the left renal hilus, resulting in renal compression and displacement toward the posterolateral abdominal cavity. Aortography excluded stenosis of the renal arterial vessels. Plasma and urinary catecholamines were normal and plasma renin activity (PRA) was high. The left renal vein renin was 2.1-fold higher than the right one. After resecting the
tumor
including the left kidney and adrenal, high blood pressure and elevated PRA returned to normal. Histologically, the
tumor
was a paraganglioma, and the affected kidney showed hyperplasia of the juxtaglomerular apparatus. Thus, the hypertension in our patient was probably due to
renal ischemia
extrinsically compressed by a non-functioning retroperitoneal paraganglioma (Page kidney).
...
PMID:Hypertension and unilateral renal ischemia (Page kidney) due to compression of a retroperitoneal paraganglioma. 891 22
Multiorgan failure is a life threatening complication in patients with ischemic acute renal failure (ARF). However, little is known about the underlying multiorgan system cellular immunity in ischemic ARF. We therefore studied the dynamics of cells accumulating in the kidneys and other organs in mice and analyzed the characteristics of the accumulated cells. We prepared a unilateral
renal ischemia
/reperfusion injury (IRI) model in C57BL/6 or C3H/He mice. At 1 to 3 hours after
renal ischemia
, increased accumulations of neutrophils and intermediate T cells were observed in the clamped kidney, but the same phenomena were also observed in the nonclamped kidney, liver, and spleen. After 24 hours, these cell numbers had returned to preischemic levels, but remained elevated for a longer period in the clamped kidney. The intermediate T cells that accumulated in the kidney and liver in the IRI mice expressed higher Vbeta chains specific to forbidden clones than in the control mice. Moreover, the accumulated intermediate T cells in the IRI liver had cytotoxic activity against both
tumor
cells and syngeneic thymocytes. In the clamped kidney, the accumulated intermediate T cells had less cytotoxic activity against
tumor
cells; however, the expression of the Fas ligand (FasL) increased, indicating a cell-mediated tissue injury via the Fas/FasL system. Histopathologically, an influx of neutrophils and lymphocytes was observed not only in the clamped kidney but also in the hepatic sinusoids concomitantly with liver dysfunction. These findings indicate that a systemic cellular immune response, including intermediate T cells, affects multiple organs during ischemic ARF, which may play an important role in the development of multiorgan failure.
...
PMID:Leukocyte accumulation and changes in extra-renal organs during renal ischemia reperfusion in mice. 1203 87
Radical nephrectomy is the gold standard curative operation for patients with localized renal cell carcinoma (RCC). Since its introduction in 1990, laparoscopic radical nephrectomy is being increasingly done at numerous institutions worldwide. In the hands of experienced laparoscopic urological surgeons and with adherence to established principles of open radical nephrectomy, laparoscopic radical nephrectomy is now a standard of care for patients with T1-3a N0 M0 RCC. Intermediate-term outcome data indicate equivalent cancer-free survival to open radical nephrectomy in such cases. Nephron-sparing surgery (NSS) is now an established approach for patients with localized RCC when there is a clinically relevant need to preserve renal function. NSS is also indicated in patients with a single, small, unilateral, localized RCC when the opposite kidney is completely normal. The technical success rate with NSS for RCC is excellent, and long-term patient survival free of cancer is comparable with that obtained after radical nephrectomy. We recently reviewed the results of NSS in 107 patients with localized sporadic RCC treated at the Cleveland Clinic before 1988 who were followed up for a minimum of 10 years. Long-term preservation of renal function was achieved in 93% of patients, and the 10-year cancer specific survival rate was 73%. Although open surgical partial nephrectomy remains the gold standard for nephron-sparing treatment of RCC, laparoscopic partial nephrectomy is now available in selected cases. The optimal indications for laparoscopic NSS are in patients with a relatively small and peripheral renal
tumor
. In such cases, laparoscopic NSS is proving to be an effective, minimally invasive therapeutic approach with respect to renal functional outcome, with additional advantages of reduced postoperative narcotic use, earlier hospital discharge, and a faster convalescence. The laparoscopic approach is associated with longer warm
renal ischemia
time, more major intraoperative complications, and more postoperative urological complications. Continued efforts are required to develop laparoscopic renal hypothermia techniques and to facilitate intrarenal suturing while minimizing the warm ischemia time.
...
PMID:Laparoscopic and partial nephrectomy. 1544 25
The most serious problem regarding a laparoscopic partial nephrectomy is how to perform bloodless excision without causing
renal ischemia
in a limited working space. We report the case of a 65-year-old man with left small renal cell carcinoma in the posterior mid zone who underwent a laparoscopic partial nephrectomy through a retroperitoneal approach by carrying out the ligation of the
tumor
-feeding artery, but without clamping the renal pedicle. Both preoperative abdominal computed tomography (CT) and intraoperative ultrasonography revealed the
tumor
to be fully encapsulated. The
tumor
-feeding artery could be exposed by dissection from the renal hilum and, after an arterial ligation,
tumor
resection with a safety margin was smoothly performed with minimal bleeding. Postoperatively, CT revealed a limited defect of the renal parenchyma and excretory pyelography showed no urine leakage or urinary tract obstruction. The preoperative and postoperative creatinine levels were 0.66 and 0.69 mg/dL, respectively. As a result, a
tumor
-feeding artery ligation with a laparoscopic partial nephrectomy for left renal cell carcinoma in the posterior mid zone is considered to be an effective surgical modality which avoids
renal ischemia
and pelvic heat injury.
...
PMID:Laparoscopic partial nephrectomy for a renal tumor with tumor-feeding artery ligation: left renal cell carcinoma in the posterior mid zone. 1550 9
The pathogenesis of
renal ischemia
/reperfusion (I/R) injury involves activating several signal transduction cascade systems in endothelial cells. Sphingosine 1-phospate (S1P) maintains endothelial cell integrity and inhibits lymphocyte egress via the specific S1P(1) receptor, and may play a role in reducing ischemic renal injury. We examined the protective effects of a newly identified S1P(1)-selective agonist, SEW2871, on mouse renal I/R injury. Kidneys were harvested 1-4 days after I/R injury for histopathology, immunofluorescence studies, and quantitative real-time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction analyses to assess the change in gene expression profiles of inflammation-associated cytokines and adhesion molecules. SEW2871 improved renal function with a 40% reduction in plasma creatinine levels (P<0.01) and a significant reduction in tubular necrosis scores (I/R only: 4.3+/-0.2 vs I/R+SEW2871: 2.5+/-0.4, P<0.05) 24 h after ischemia. These changes were accompanied by 69% reduction in circulating lymphocytes, and 77 and 66% reduction in infiltrating neutrophils and macrophages in renal outer medulla, respectively (all P<0.01). The mRNA abundance of
tumor
necrotic factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), P-selectin, E-selectin, and intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) was markedly increased by I/R injury (3.5-, 4.1-, 3.5-, and 4.8-folds, respectively, all P<0.05 vs sham). SEW2871 treatment partially reversed the upregulation of TNF-alpha, P-selectin, and ICAM-1 (47, 59, 54%, respectively, vs I/R control: 100%, all P<0.05). The reduction in protein expression of TNF-alpha, P-selectin, and ICAM-1 was further confirmed with immunofluorescence studies. These results suggest that SEW2871 ameliorates renal I/R injury by inhibiting lymphocyte egress and reducing pro-inflammatory molecules. This new class of renoprotective agent shows promise as a novel approach in preventing/treating ischemic acute renal failure.
...
PMID:S1P(1)-selective agonist, SEW2871, ameliorates ischemic acute renal failure. 1657 8
Overexpression of the forkhead family transcription factor Foxc2 has been shown to activate epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and correlate with
tumor
metastasis. In this study, we show that both mRNA and protein levels of Foxc2 increase 1 day after
kidney ischemia
/reperfusion in sublethally injured tubular cells and that the protein is located in the cytoplasm rather than the nucleus of these cells. in vitro studies of cultured tubular cells confirm the cytoplasmic location of Foxc2 and show that increased cytoplasmic expression of Foxc2 correlates with epithelial differentiation rather than dedifferentiation. Silencing of Foxc2 by RNAi in these cells led to EMT and increased cell migration. In contrast, Foxc2 is found in both the nucleus and cytoplasm of cultured fibroblasts, with RNAi leading to increased expression of epithelial markers and impaired cell migration. Consistent with a subcellular localization dependence of Foxc2 function, overexpression of Foxc2 in renal epithelial cells resulted in de novo nuclear expression of the protein and promotion of a mesenchymal/fibroblast phenotype. These results suggest that Foxc2 may have regulatory functions independent of its nuclear transcriptional activity and that upregulation of endogenous Foxc2 in the cytoplasm of injured tubular cells activates epithelial cell redifferentiation rather than dedifferentiation during organ repair.
...
PMID:Mesenchymal-epithelial transition in epithelial response to injury: the role of Foxc2. 1993 8
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