Stenosis-dependent role of nitric oxide and prostaglandins in chronic renal ischemia

Tokuyama, H; Hayashi, K; Matsuda, H; Kubota, E; Honda, M; Okubo, K; Ozawa, Y; Saruta, T

HERO ID

1656207

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2002

Language

English

PMID

11934696

HERO ID 1656207
In Press No
Year 2002
Title Stenosis-dependent role of nitric oxide and prostaglandins in chronic renal ischemia
Authors Tokuyama, H; Hayashi, K; Matsuda, H; Kubota, E; Honda, M; Okubo, K; Ozawa, Y; Saruta, T
Journal American Journal of Physiology: Renal Physiology
Volume 282
Issue 5
Page Numbers F859-F865
Abstract The role of nitric oxide (NO) and prostaglandins (PG) in modifying renal hemodynamics was examined in clipped and nonclipped kidneys of unilateral renal artery stenosis. Chronic unilateral renal ischemia was established by 4-wk-clipping the left renal artery of canine kidneys, and renal interstitial nitrate+nitrite and PGE(2) contents were evaluated by the microdialysis technique. Unilateral renal artery stenosis caused 45 +/- 1 and 73 +/- 1% decrements in renal plasma flow (RPF) in moderately and severely clipped kidneys and 21 +/- 3% decrements in nonclipped kidneys with severe stenosis. Renal nitrate+nitrite decreased in moderately (-31 +/- 1%) and severely clipped kidneys (-63 +/- 4%). N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester reduced RPF (-56 +/- 3%) and glomerular filtration rate (GFR; -54 +/- 3%) in moderately clipped kidneys, whereas this inhibitory effect was abolished in severely clipped kidneys. In contrast, renal PGE(2) contents increased modestly in moderate clipping and were markedly elevated in severely clipped kidneys (from 111 +/- 7 to 377 +/- 22 pg/ml); sulpyrine impaired renal hemodynamics only in severely clipped kidneys. In contralateral nonclipped kidneys, although renal PGE(2) was not increased, sulpyrine reduced RPF (-32 +/- 1%) and GFR (-33 +/- 3%) in severe stenosis. Collectively, NO plays a substantial role in maintaining renal hemodynamics both under basal condition and in moderate renal artery stenosis, whereas the contributory role shifts from NO to PG as renal artery stenosis progresses. Furthermore, because intrarenal angiotensin II is reported to increase in nonclipped kidneys, unilateral severe ischemia may render the nonclipped kidney susceptible to PG inhibition.
Doi 10.1152/ajprenal.00012.2001
Pmid 11934696
Wosid WOS:000174779200011
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Comments Source: Web of Science WOS:000174779200011
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword ischemic nephropathy; renal artery stenosis; renal hemodynamics