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Renal endothelial function is associated with the anti-proteinuric effect of ACE inhibition in 5/6 nephrectomized rats

Authors :
Dick de Zeeuw
Robert H. Henning
Peter Vavrinec
Leo E. Deelman
Hendrik Buikema
Peter Ochodnicky
Simone Vettoretti
Groningen Kidney Center (GKC)
Groningen Institute for Organ Transplantation (GIOT)
Extramural researchers
Source :
American journal of physiology-Renal physiology, 310(10), F1047-F1053. AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC, American journal of physiology. Renal physiology, 310(10), F1047-F1053. American Physiological Society
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

In healthy rats, the physiological variation of baseline endothelial function of intrarenal arteries correlates with the severity of renal damage in response to a subsequent specific renal injury. However, whether such a variation in endothelial function may also condition or predict the variable response to angiotensin-converting enzyme-inhibiting treatment in these individuals has not been addressed before. To study this, 5/6 nephrectomy was performed to induce renal injury and chronic kidney disease in a group of healthy Wistar rats. At the time of nephrectomy, interlobar arteries were obtained from the extirpated right kidney and studied in vitro for endothelium-dependent relaxation to acetylcholine. Six weeks thereafter, treatment with lisinopril was started ( n = 11) and continued for 9 wk. Proteinuria (metabolic cages) and systolic blood pressure (SBP; tail cuff) were evaluated weekly, and these were analyzed in relation to renal endothelial function at baseline. 5/6 Nephrectomy induced an increase in SBP and progressive proteinuria. Treatment with lisinopril reduced SBP and slowed proteinuria, albeit to a variable degree among individuals. The acetylcholine-induced renal artery dilation at baseline negatively correlated with lisinopril-induced reduction of proteinuria ( r2= 0.648, P = 0.003) and with the decrease in SBP ( r2= 0.592, P = 0.006). Our data suggest that angiotensin-converting enzyme-inhibitor attenuates the progression of renal damage the most in those individuals with decreased basal renal endothelial-mediated vasodilation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1931857X and 03636127
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of physiology-Renal physiology, 310(10), F1047-F1053. AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC, American journal of physiology. Renal physiology, 310(10), F1047-F1053. American Physiological Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....72883fab6fd705ac613f9d82510b731e