Literature DB >> 10548380

Pathophysiology of radiocontrast nephropathy: a role for medullary hypoxia.

S N Heyman1, J Reichman, M Brezis.   

Abstract

Recent experimental data underlies the role of hypoxic tubular injury in the pathophysiology of radiocontrast nephropathy. Although systemic transient hypoxemia, increased blood viscosity, and a leftward shift of the oxygen-hemoglobin dissociation curve may all contribute to intrarenal hypoxia, imbalance between oxygen demand and supply plays a major role in radiocontrast-induced outer medullary hypoxic damage. Low oxygen tension normally exists in this renal region, reflecting the precarious regional oxygen supply and a high local metabolic rate and oxygen requirement, resulting from active salt reabsorption by medullary thick ascending limbs of Henle's loop. Radiologic contrast agents markedly aggravate outer medullary physiologic hypoxia. This results from enhanced metabolic activity and oxygen consumption (as a result of osmotic diuresis and increased salt delivery to the distal nephron) because the regional blood flow and the oxygen supply actually increase. The latter effect may result in part from the activation of various regulatory mediators of outer medullary blood flow to ensure maximal regional oxygen supply. Low-osmolar radiocontrast agents may be less nephrotoxic because of the smaller osmotic load and vasomotor alterations. Experimental radiocontrast-induced renal failure requires preconditioning of animals with various insults (for example, congestive heart failure, reduced renal mass, salt depletion, or inhibition of nitric oxide and prostaglandin synthesis). In all these perturbations, which resemble clinical conditions that predispose to contrast nephropathy, outer medullary hypoxic injury results from insufficiency or inactivation of mechanisms designed to preserve regional oxygen balance. This underlines the importance of identifying and ameliorating predisposing factors in the prevention of this iatrogenic disease.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10548380     DOI: 10.1097/00004424-199911000-00004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Invest Radiol        ISSN: 0020-9996            Impact factor:   6.016


  40 in total

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4.  Evaluation of intrarenal oxygenation in iodinated contrast-induced acute kidney injury-susceptible rats by blood oxygen level-dependent magnetic resonance imaging.

Authors:  Lu-Ping Li; Jing Lu; Ying Zhou; Maria V Papadopoulou; Tammy Franklin; Ujala Bokhary; Richard Solomon; Anindya Sen; Pottumarthi V Prasad
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5.  Effect of a recombinant manganese superoxide dismutase on prevention of contrast-induced acute kidney injury.

Authors:  Antonio Pisani; Massimo Sabbatini; Eleonora Riccio; Roberta Rossano; Michele Andreucci; Clemente Capasso; Viviana De Luca; Vincenzo Carginale; Mariano Bizzarri; Antonella Borrelli; Antonella Schiattarella; Michele Santangelo; Aldo Mancini
Journal:  Clin Exp Nephrol       Date:  2013-06-27       Impact factor: 2.801

6.  Association between Platelet-to-Lymphocyte Ratio and Contrast-Induced Nephropathy in Patients Undergoing Percutaneous Coronary Intervention for Acute Coronary Syndrome.

Authors:  Muhammed Bora Demircelik; Alparslan Kurtul; Hakan Ocek; Muzaffer Cakmak; Cagın Ureyen; Beyhan Eryonucu
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7.  Gadolinium contrast media are more nephrotoxic than iodine media. The importance of osmolality in direct renal artery injections.

Authors:  Barbara Elmståhl; Ulf Nyman; Peter Leander; Chun-Ming Chai; Klaes Golman; Jonas Björk; Torsten Almén
Journal:  Eur Radiol       Date:  2006-08-05       Impact factor: 5.315

8.  Urinary oxygen tension measurement in humans using magnetic resonance imaging.

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9.  Comparison of renal damage by iodinated contrast or gadolinium in an acute renal failure rat model based on serum creatinine levels and apoptosis degree.

Authors:  Hyo-Sung Kwak; Young-Hwan Lee; Young-Min Han; Gong-Yong Jin; Won Kim; Gyung-Ho Chung
Journal:  J Korean Med Sci       Date:  2005-10       Impact factor: 2.153

10.  Contrast induced nephropathy in urology.

Authors:  Viji Samuel Thomson; Kumar Narayanan; J Chandra Singh
Journal:  Indian J Urol       Date:  2009 Oct-Dec
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