Sarah A Hosgood1, Meeta Patel, Michael L Nicholson. 1. Department of Infection, Immunity and Inflammation, Transplant Group, University of Leicester, Leicester General Hospital, Leicester, UK. sarahhosgood@hotmail.com
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A short period of isolated normothermic perfusion (NP) can be used to improve the condition of the kidney after periods of warm and cold ischemic injury. However, the mechanisms underlying this beneficial effect have not been determined. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Porcine kidneys were retrieved after 10 min of warm ischemic injury and stored by either static cold storage (CS) for 24 h (control) or CS for 23 h followed by 1 h of NP at 38°C with leukocyte-depleted autologous blood (NP). After preservation, kidneys in both groups underwent 3 h of ex vivo reperfusion to assess the injury (n = 6). RESULTS: NP kidneys had significantly lower levels of intrarenal resistance (NP 2.28 ± 1.1 versus control 3.86 ± 1.2 mm Hg/mL/h; P = 0.040), maintained their acid base homeostasis (P = 0.080), and had higher levels of oxygen consumption (NP 42.6 ± 19.5 versus control 20.8 ± 5.7 mL/min/g; P = 0.026) and reduced tubular injury (P = 0.008) compared with kidneys in the control group during reperfusion. There were no significant differences in the levels of inflammatory cytokines (interleukin [IL]-1β, IL-8, or tumor necrosis factor-α; P > 0.05) or in renal function (creatinine clearance NP 2.6 ± 1.3 versus control 3.0 ± 1.5 mL/min/100 g; P = 0.070). However, levels of IL-6 were significantly raised in the NP group after reperfusion (P = 0.016). Levels of heat shock protein 70 were upregulated after 1 h of NP and expression increased during reperfusion to a significantly higher level than in the control group (P = 0.045). CONCLUSION: Kidneys undergoing a short period of NP had improved metabolic function and less tubular injury compared with static cold-stored kidneys. The increased expression of heat shock protein 70 and IL-6 suggests that NP may upregulate mechanisms that condition the kidney.
BACKGROUND: A short period of isolated normothermic perfusion (NP) can be used to improve the condition of the kidney after periods of warm and cold ischemic injury. However, the mechanisms underlying this beneficial effect have not been determined. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Porcine kidneys were retrieved after 10 min of warm ischemic injury and stored by either static cold storage (CS) for 24 h (control) or CS for 23 h followed by 1 h of NP at 38°C with leukocyte-depleted autologous blood (NP). After preservation, kidneys in both groups underwent 3 h of ex vivo reperfusion to assess the injury (n = 6). RESULTS: NP kidneys had significantly lower levels of intrarenal resistance (NP 2.28 ± 1.1 versus control 3.86 ± 1.2 mm Hg/mL/h; P = 0.040), maintained their acid base homeostasis (P = 0.080), and had higher levels of oxygen consumption (NP 42.6 ± 19.5 versus control 20.8 ± 5.7 mL/min/g; P = 0.026) and reduced tubular injury (P = 0.008) compared with kidneys in the control group during reperfusion. There were no significant differences in the levels of inflammatory cytokines (interleukin [IL]-1β, IL-8, or tumor necrosis factor-α; P > 0.05) or in renal function (creatinine clearance NP 2.6 ± 1.3 versus control 3.0 ± 1.5 mL/min/100 g; P = 0.070). However, levels of IL-6 were significantly raised in the NP group after reperfusion (P = 0.016). Levels of heat shock protein 70 were upregulated after 1 h of NP and expression increased during reperfusion to a significantly higher level than in the control group (P = 0.045). CONCLUSION: Kidneys undergoing a short period of NP had improved metabolic function and less tubular injury compared with static cold-stored kidneys. The increased expression of heat shock protein 70 and IL-6 suggests that NP may upregulate mechanisms that condition the kidney.
Authors: Matthew F Blum; Qiang Liu; Basem Soliman; Paul Dreher; Toshihiro Okamoto; Emilio D Poggio; David A Goldfarb; William M Baldwin; Cristiano Quintini Journal: J Surg Res Date: 2017-04-20 Impact factor: 2.192
Authors: Gregory T Tietjen; Sarah A Hosgood; Jenna DiRito; Jiajia Cui; Deeksha Deep; Eric Song; Jan R Kraehling; Alexandra S Piotrowski-Daspit; Nancy C Kirkiles-Smith; Rafia Al-Lamki; Sathia Thiru; J Andrew Bradley; Kourosh Saeb-Parsy; John R Bradley; Michael L Nicholson; W Mark Saltzman; Jordan S Pober Journal: Sci Transl Med Date: 2017-11-29 Impact factor: 17.956
Authors: Merel B F Pool; Tim L Hamelink; Harry van Goor; Marius C van den Heuvel; Henri G D Leuvenink; Cyril Moers Journal: PLoS One Date: 2021-05-18 Impact factor: 3.240
Authors: J Moritz Kaths; Vinzent N Spetzler; Nicolas Goldaracena; Juan Echeverri; Kristine S Louis; Daniel B Foltys; Mari Strempel; Paul Yip; Rohan John; Istvan Mucsi; Anand Ghanekar; Darius Bagli; Lisa Robinson; Markus Selzner Journal: J Vis Exp Date: 2015-07-15 Impact factor: 1.355
Authors: Paria Mahboub; Petra Ottens; Marc Seelen; Nils 't Hart; Nails t Hart; Harry Van Goor; Rutger Ploeg; Paulo N Martins; Paulo Martins; Henri Leuvenink Journal: PLoS One Date: 2015-12-02 Impact factor: 3.240