| Literature DB >> 24745009 |
Ashour Michael1, Teresa Faga1, Antonio Pisani2, Eleonora Riccio2, Placido Bramanti3, Massimo Sabbatini2, Michele Navarra4, Michele Andreucci1.
Abstract
Modern iodinated radiocontrast media are all based on the triiodinated benzene ring with various chemical modifications having been made over the last few decades in order to reduce their toxicity. However, CIN remains a problem especially in patients with pre-existing renal failure. In vitro studies have demonstrated that all RCM are cytotoxic. RCM administration in vivo may lead to a decrease in renal medullary oxygenation leading to the generation of reactive oxygen species that may cause harmful effects to renal tissue. In addition, endothelin and adenosine release and decreased nitric oxide levels may worsen the hypoxic milieu. In vitro cell culture studies together with sparse in vivo rat model data have shown that important cell signalling pathways are affected by RCM. In particular, the prosurvival and proproliferative kinases Akt and ERK1/2 have been shown to be dephosphorylated (deactivated), whilst proinflammatory/cell death molecules such as the p38 and JNK kinases and the transcription factor NF- κ B may be activated by RCM, accompanied by activation of apoptotic mediators such as caspases. Increasing our knowledge of the mechanisms of RCM action may help to develop future therapies for CIN.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24745009 PMCID: PMC3976916 DOI: 10.1155/2014/249810
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Iodinated contrast media commonly used in clinical practice.
| Name | Type | Iodine content | Osmolality | Osmolality type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (mg/mL) | (mOsm/kg) | |||
| Ionic | ||||
| Diatrizoate (Hypaque 76) | Monomer | 370 | 2,016 | HOCM |
| Metrizoate (Isopaque 370) | Monomer | 370 | 2,100 | HOCM |
| Iothalamate (Conray 400) | Monomer | 400 | 2,300 | HOCM |
| Ioxaglate (Hexabrix) | Dimer | 320 | 580 | LOCM |
| Nonionic | ||||
| Iopamidol (Isovue 370) | Monomer | 370 | 796 | LOCM |
| Iohexol (Omnipaque 350) | Monomer | 350 | 884 | LOCM |
| Iopromide (Ultravist 370) | Monomer | 370 | 774 | LOCM |
| Ioversol (Optiray 350) | Monomer | 350 | 792 | LOCM |
| Iomeprol (Iomeron 400) | Monomer | 400 | 720 | LOCM |
| Iobitridol (Xenetix 350) | Monomer | 350 | 915 | LOCM |
| Iodixanol (Visipaque 320) | Dimer | 320 | 290 | IOCM |
| Iotrolan (Isovist 300) | Dimer | 300 | 320 | IOCM |
Ionic and nonionic contrast media may be monomeric or dimeric; 3 iodine atoms are present on each benzene ring of the contrast medium: if a contrast molecule contains only 1 benzene ring, it is called a monomer, if it contains 2 benzene rings, it is called a dimer. In solution, ionic contrast media break up into their anion and cation components, thereby increasing osmolality, while nonionic contrast media do not break up in solution. Nonionic dimers are the ideal contrast media as they deliver the most iodine with the least effect on osmolality.
The osmolality of contrast media is compared with the osmolality of plasma. HOCM (high-osmolar contrast media) have the highest osmolality, that is, 5–8 times the osmolality of plasma. LOCM (low-osmolar contrast media) have an osmolality still higher than plasma, which is, 2-3 times the osmolality of plasma. IOCM (iso-osmolar contrast media) have the same osmolality as plasma.
Summary of some in vitro cell culture studies using different types of RCM.
| Authors/year of publication | Radiocontrast media used; cell type used | Cell functional/structural changes observed |
|---|---|---|
| Laerum 1983 [ | HOCM and LOCM; human endothelial cells | Chromium-51 release as measure of cell toxicity; HOCM more toxic than LOCM |
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| Andersen et al. 1994 [ | Ionic monomeric/dimeric, nonionic LOCM; MDCK and LLC-PK1 cells | RCM caused formation of large cytoplasmic vacuoles; increase in brush border and lysosomal marker enzyme activity |
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| Dascalu and Peer 1994 [ | Ionic/nonionic RCM; endothelial and renal cells | Acidification of internal pH; decrease in cell viability |
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| Andersen et al. 1995 [ | Nonionic LOCM and IOCM; MDCK and LLC-PK1 cells | RCM caused concentration-dependent formation of large cytoplasmic vacuoles; cell death/decrease in cell viability; increase in brush border and lysosomal marker enzyme activity. These effects were more pronounced with LOCM than with IOCM |
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| Potier et al. 1997 [ | Ionic/nonionic LOCM and HOCM; mesangial cells | Dye uptake as measure of cell viability |
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| Haller et al. 1997 [ | HOCM and LOCM; MDCK and LLC-PK1 cells | HOCM more toxic. LLC-PK1 cells more susceptible to RCM cytotoxicity |
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| Hizóh et al. 1998 [ | MDCK; HOCM | DNA fragmentation caused by RCM |
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| Hardiek et al. 2001 [ | LLC-PK1 cells and human renal proximal tubule cells; HOCM, LOCM, and IOCM | Cell viability was affected by all RCM with HOCM having a greater affect than IOCM which in turn had a greater effect than LOCM |
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| Fanning et al. 2002 [ | Human neutrophils; HOCM, LOCM, and IOCM | All types of RCM induced neutrophil apoptosis, with HOCM having greater effect |
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| Hizoh and Haller 2002 [ | MDCK cells; HOCM | HOCM induced DNA fragmentation |
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| Yano et al. 2003 [ | LLC-PK1 cells; HOCM and LOCM | HOCM caused a greater decrease in cell viability |
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| Ribeiro et al. 2004 [ | Renal artery smooth muscle cells; HOCM and LOCM | HOCM caused a greater decrease in cell viability |
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| Heinrich et al. 2005 [ | LLC-PK1 cells; HOCM, LOCM, and IOCM | All types of RCM cause a decrease in cell viability with HOCM showing greatest effect |
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| Andreucci et al. 2006, 2011, 2014 [ | HK-2 cells; HOCM, LOCM, and IOCM | All RCM caused a decrease in cell viability in the order HOCM > LOCM > IOCM |
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| Heinrich et al. 2007 [ | LLC-PK1 cells; LOCM and IOCM | Cell viability measured; no difference in toxicity between the 2 types of RCM |
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| Yang et al. 2013 [ | LOCM (ioversol); rat renal proximal tubular cell line (NRK-52E) | Decrease in cell viability and increase in intracellular Ca2+ ion concentration |
Figure 1Scheme showing the effects of RCM on signaling molecules. The scheme relates to effects on signaling molecules that may underlie the toxic effects of RCM. RCM cause inactivation of the kinase Akt (as shown by the minus symbol) leading to activation of FoxO transcription factors which may lead to cell death; upregulation of ET-1 transcription and hence vasoconstriction; deactivation of the p70S6 kinase and hence downregulation of protein synthesis. ERK1/2 are also inactivated which may lead to a decrease in activity of COX-2 and prostaglandin production and hence inhibition of vasodilation. RCM also downregulate cAMP and hence the cAMP dependent kinase PKA. The antiapoptotic protein Bcl-2 is downregulated, whilst the proapoptotic proteins Bax, Bim, Bad, and caspases-3 and -9 are upregulated (as shown by the plus symbol) by RCM. The JNK and p38 MAP kinases are activated as also is the transcription factor NF-κB, all three of which may play a role in cell death and inflammation. Hypoxia and mitochondrial damage caused by RCM may lead to the formation of ROS (reactive oxygen species) that can cause cell death and inflammation; and to the formation of adenosine that can cause vasoconstriction, whilst its metabolism by xanthine oxidase can lead to further formation of ROS.