| Literature DB >> 26441970 |
Tim D Hewitson1, Stephen G Holt1, Edward R Smith2.
Abstract
The close association between cardiovascular pathology and renal dysfunction is well documented and significant. Patients with conventional risk factors for cardiovascular disease like diabetes and hypertension also suffer renal dysfunction. This is unsurprising if the kidney is simply regarded as a "modified blood vessel" and thus, traditional risk factors will affect both systems. Consistent with this, it is relatively easy to comprehend how patients with either sudden or gradual cardiac and or vascular compromise have changes in both renal hemodynamic and regulatory systems. However, patients with pure or primary renal dysfunction also have metabolic changes (e.g., oxidant stress, inflammation, nitric oxide, or endocrine changes) that affect the cardiovascular system. Thus, cardiovascular and renal systems are intimately, bidirectionally and inextricably linked. Whilst we understand several of these links, some of the mechanisms for these connections remain incompletely explained. Animal models of cardiovascular and renal disease allow us to explore such mechanisms, and more importantly, potential therapeutic strategies. In this article, we review various experimental models used, and examine critically how representative they are of the human condition.Entities:
Keywords: animal models; cardiorenal syndrome; heart; kidney; review
Year: 2015 PMID: 26441970 PMCID: PMC4585255 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2015.00465
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Pathophysiological mediators of cardiorenal syndrome and renocardiac syndrome. MBD, mineral bone disorder; NO, nitric oxide; RAAS, renal–angiotensin–aldosterone system; RBF, renal blood flow; SNS, sympathetic nervous system.
Animal models of cardiorenal and renocardiac syndromes, and relative advantages and disadvantages of each.
| Model | Technique | Mechanism | Advantages | Disadvantages | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coronary artery ligation (CAL) | Surgical | Myocardial ischemia (MI) | Widely used, well characterized | Variable renal pathology | ( |
| Aortic regurgitation | Surgical | Cardiac volume overload | Mild renal pathology | ( | |
| Sub-total nephrectomy (SNx) | Surgical | Uremia, renal insufficiency | Relevant to CKD in general, well characterized | Highly variable if not performed uniformly | ( |
| SNx followed by CAL | Surgical | High mortality | ( | ||
| SNx followed by CAL with established CKD | Surgical | Clinical relevance | ( | ||
| CAL followed by SNx | Surgical | High mortality, poorly characterized | ( | ||
| CAL and uninephrectomy | Surgical | Lower mortality than SNx, and more reproducible | Unrepresentative of chronic kidney disease | ( | |
| Anthracycline antitumor antibiotics (e.g., adriamycin) | IV injection | Toxicity | Simple. Simultaneous cardiac and renal pathologies | Off target toxicity, cardiac and renal dose responses differ | ( |
| Anemia | Simple | Mild anemia | ( | ||
| L-NAME | IV injection | NOS inhibition, SNS activity | Simultaneous cardiac and renal pathologies | ( | |
| Spontaneously hypertensive rat (various inbred strains) | Spontaneous | Hypertension, RAAS | Uncommon cause of human hypertension | ( | |
| Zucker rat (inbred rat strain with leptin receptor deficiency) | Spontaneous | Dyslipidemia | Approximates type 2 diabetes | Leptin receptor mutations are rare in humans | ( |
| db/db mouse (leptin receptor mutation) | Spontaneous | Dyslipidemia | Approximates type 2 diabetes | Leptin receptor mutations are rare in humans | ( |
| Diabetic mRen2 rat (STZ diabetes in transgenic renin overexpressing rat) | Spontaneous, IV injection | hyperglycemia, hypertension, RAAS | Accelerated type 1 diabetes, simultaneous cardiac and renal functional changes | Hypertension is primary rather than secondary to diabetes | ( |
| Lupus | Spontaneous | Unrepresentative of human condition | ( | ||
| Hepatic bile duct ligation | Surgical | Off target pathology | ( | ||
| Phosphate/vitamin D loading post-SNx | Surgical, oral intake | Mineral bone disorder | Widely used, well characterized | Slow, high mortality, poorly reproducible with complications, unphysiological | ( |
| Adenine | Oral intake | Mineral bone disorder | Simple, rapidly progressive | Substantial weight loss (dehydration) | ( |
| Electrocautery in LDLR−/− or apoE−/− mice | Surgical, spontaneous | Mineral bone disorder | Good models of atherosclerosis | Not widely available, poor models of arteriosclerosis (lack of intimal calcification). | ( |
| Han:SPRD+/− | Spontaneous | Mineral bone disorder | Spontaneous, mimics chronicity of process | Not widely available, no bone phenotype, mild calcification phenotype | ( |
CAL, coronary artery ligation; .