The present study addressed the effect of interventions aimed to increase NO in the setting of acute renal ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) in uninephrectomized rabbits. In the 60-minute post-I/R period, L-arginine+superoxide (O2.-) dismutase (SOD) synergistically improved the renal functional (69.4% versus 10.4% of the pre-I/R glomerular filtration rate with or without L-arginine+SOD, respectively; p < .01) and histological parameters (82.9% decrease of medullary congestion in L-arginine+SOD, P < .01 versus vehicle) and blocked the I/R-dependent neutrophil accumulation (89.3% reduction). In spite of these results over the short term, a second set of experiments disclosed that the protection by L-arginine+SOD was no longer present at 24 and 48 hours (plasma creatinine in vehicle-treated versus L-arginine+SOD-treated animals [mg/100 mL]: 24 hours after I/R, 9.4 +/- 1.9 versus 8.07 +/- 0.65; 48 hours after I/R, 11.6 +/- 3.6 versus 9.7 +/- 0.9; P = NS in all the cases). Additional experiments were conducted using a milder 30-minute ischemic model, which showed no significant functional or histological protection by using L-arginine+SOD. In conclusion, our experiments disclosed the following: (1) the critical importance of the interaction between NO and O2.- in the acute protective effect of L-arginine (this effect not only improved renal function and histology but also reduced neutrophil accumulation) and (2) the discordance existing between the immediate protection afforded by L-arginine+SOD and the lack of protection observed at 24 and 48 hours. This finding suggests that a punctual intervention on the NO system at the time of I/R is not sufficient to reduce renal damage over the long term.
Our results show that myocardial ischemia/reperfusion stimulates production of NO by circulating neutrophils, an effect that was enhanced in the presence of aspirin. These results suggest a novel interpretation of the protective effect of aspirin on myocardial ischemia damage.
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