Literature DB >> 24647716

MRI-based glomerular morphology and pathology in whole human kidneys.

Scott C Beeman1, Luise A Cullen-McEwen2, Victor G Puelles2, Min Zhang3, Teresa Wu3, Edwin J Baldelomar4, John Dowling5, Jennifer R Charlton6, Michael S Forbes6, Amanda Ng7, Qi-zhu Wu7, James A Armitage2, Gary F Egan7, John F Bertram2, Kevin M Bennett8.   

Abstract

Nephron number (N(glom)) and size (V(glom)) are correlated with risk for chronic cardiovascular and kidney disease and may be predictive of renal allograft viability. Unfortunately, there are no techniques to assess N(glom) and V(glom) in intact kidneys. This work demonstrates the use of cationized ferritin (CF) as a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agent to measure N(glom) and V(glom) in viable human kidneys donated to science. The kidneys were obtained from patients with varying levels of cardiovascular and renal disease. CF was intravenously injected into three viable human kidneys. A fourth control kidney was perfused with saline. After fixation, immunofluorescence and electron microscopy confirmed binding of CF to the glomerulus. The intact kidneys were imaged with three-dimensional MRI and CF-labeled glomeruli appeared as punctate spots. Custom software identified, counted, and measured the apparent volumes of CF-labeled glomeruli, with an ~6% false positive rate. These measurements were comparable to stereological estimates. The MRI-based technique yielded a novel whole kidney distribution of glomerular volumes. Histopathology demonstrated that the distribution of CF-labeled glomeruli may be predictive of glomerular and vascular disease. Variations in CF distribution were quantified using image texture analyses, which be a useful marker of glomerular sclerosis. This is the first report of direct measurement of glomerular number and volume in intact human kidneys.
Copyright © 2014 the American Physiological Society.

Entities:  

Keywords:  cationized ferritin; chronic kidney disease; magnetic resonance imaging

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24647716      PMCID: PMC4042103          DOI: 10.1152/ajprenal.00092.2014

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol Renal Physiol        ISSN: 1522-1466


  28 in total

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  49 in total

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7.  Live nephron imaging by MRI.

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