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Adaptive physiological water conservation explains hypertension and muscle catabolism in experimental chronic renal failure
- Source :
- Acta Physiologica (Oxford, England)
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- John Wiley and Sons Inc., 2021.
-
Abstract
- Aim We have reported earlier that a high salt intake triggered an aestivation‐like natriuretic‐ureotelic body water conservation response that lowered muscle mass and increased blood pressure. Here, we tested the hypothesis that a similar adaptive water conservation response occurs in experimental chronic renal failure. Methods In four subsequent experiments in Sprague Dawley rats, we used surgical 5/6 renal mass reduction (5/6 Nx) to induce chronic renal failure. We studied solute and water excretion in 24‐hour metabolic cage experiments, chronic blood pressure by radiotelemetry, chronic metabolic adjustment in liver and skeletal muscle by metabolomics and selected enzyme activity measurements, body Na+, K+ and water by dry ashing, and acute transepidermal water loss in conjunction with skin blood flow and intra‐arterial blood pressure. Results 5/6 Nx rats were polyuric, because their kidneys could not sufficiently concentrate the urine. Physiological adaptation to this renal water loss included mobilization of nitrogen and energy from muscle for organic osmolyte production, elevated norepinephrine and copeptin levels with reduced skin blood flow, which by means of compensation reduced their transepidermal water loss. This complex physiologic‐metabolic adjustment across multiple organs allowed the rats to stabilize their body water content despite persisting renal water loss, albeit at the expense of hypertension and catabolic mobilization of muscle protein. Conclusion Physiological adaptation to body water loss, termed aestivation, is an evolutionary conserved survival strategy and an under‐studied research area in medical physiology, which besides hypertension and muscle mass loss in chronic renal failure may explain many otherwise unexplainable phenomena in medicine.
- Subjects :
- Male
0301 basic medicine
Physiology
Body water
Blood Pressure
030204 cardiovascular system & hematology
Rats, Sprague-Dawley
0302 clinical medicine
Regular Paper
double‐barrier concept
muscle mass loss
transamination
Kidney
glycine methylation
Muscles
urine concentration
glucose‐alanine‐shuttle
purine metabolism
aestivation
medicine.anatomical_structure
medicine.drug
body water
medicine.medical_specialty
kidney
skin
hypertension
organic osmolytes
liver
Cardivascular Physiology
Norepinephrine (medication)
03 medical and health sciences
Copeptin
hepato‐renal
Internal medicine
medicine
urea cycle
Animals
Humans
body sodium
Salt intake
Muscle, Skeletal
Transepidermal water loss
Conservation of Water Resources
business.industry
Skeletal muscle
transepidermal water loss
Water
dehydration
Rats
030104 developmental biology
Blood pressure
Endocrinology
Cardiovascular and Metabolic Diseases
Kidney Failure, Chronic
business
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 17481716 and 17481708
- Volume :
- 232
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Acta Physiologica (Oxford, England)
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....cf492c779ea129f0a33d8a67cc133b75