Chronic renal injury can be mediated by angiotensin II (ANG II) and prostanoids through hemodynamic and inflammatory mechanisms and attenuated by individual suppression of these mediators. In rats with (5/6) renal ablation (Nx), we investigated 1) the intrarenal distribution of COX-2, ANG II, and the AT(1) receptor (AT(1)R); 2) the renoprotective and antiinflammatory effects of an association between the AT(1)R blocker, losartan (Los), and the gastric sparing anti-inflammatory nitroflurbiprofen (NOF). Adult male Munich-Wistar rats underwent Nx or sham operation (S), remaining untreated for 30 days, after which renal structure was examined in 12 Nx rats (Nx(pre)). The remaining rats were followed during an additional 90 days, distributed among 4 treatment groups: Nx(V) (vehicle), Nx(Los) (Los), Nx(NOF) (NOF), and Nx(Los/NOF) (Los/NOF). Nx(pre) rats exhibited marked albuminuria, hypertension, glomerulosclerosis, interstitial expansion, and macrophage infiltration, accompanied by abnormal glomerular, vascular, and interstitial COX-2 expression. ANG II appeared in interstitial cells, in contrast to S, in which ANG II was virtually confined to afferent arterioles. Intrarenal AT(1)R distribution shifted from mostly tubular in S to predominantly interstitial in Nx(pre). All these changes were aggravated at 120 days and attenuated by Los and NOF monotherapies. Los/NOF treatment arrested renal structural injury and ANG II expression and reversed hypertension, albuminuria, and renal inflammation. In conclusion, abnormal expression of COX-2, ANG II, and AT(1)R may be key to development of renal injury in Nx. Concomitant COX-2 inhibition and AT(1)R blockade arrested renal injury and may represent a useful strategy in the treatment of chronic nephropathies.
Organ transplantation is the only alternative for many patients with terminal diseases. The increasing disproportion between the high demand for organ transplants and the low rate of transplants actually performed is worrisome. Some of the causes of this disproportion are errors in the identification of potential organ donors and in the determination of contraindications by the attending staff. Therefore, the aim of the present document is to provide guidelines for intensive care multi-professional staffs for the recognition, assessment and acceptance of potential organ donors.
Brain death (BD) alters the pathophysiology of patients and may damage the kidneys, the lungs, the heart and the liver. To obtain better quality transplant organs, intensive care physicians in charge of the maintenance of deceased donors should attentively monitor these organs. Careful hemodynamic, ventilatory and bronchial clearance management minimizes the loss of kidneys and lungs. The evaluation of cardiac function and morphology supports the transplant viability assessment of the heart. The monitoring of liver function, the management of the patient's metabolic status and the evaluation of viral serology are fundamental for organ selection by the transplant teams and for the care of the transplant recipient. OBJECTIVEThese guidelines are aimed at contributing to the institutional coordination of organ transplantation and will provide "real world" guidelines that are appropriate in the Brazilian context for the uniform care of the deceased donor. Ultimately, this aim of this guide is to increase the quality and quantity of transplantable organs. METHODOLOGYThe Writing and Planning Committee, comprised of young intensive care physicians and intensive medicine residents, conducted an extensive literature review. From this review, they formulated questions and forwarded the questions to all of the authors of this article. These initial questions served as the starting point for receiving suggestions for the formulation of other questions and definitions.The final questions were revised by the Executive Committee and were returned to the authors to develop the guidelines presented in this article.The questions guided the literature review, which was conducted using the P.I.C.O. methodology where P stands for the target population, I for the intervention, C for the control or comparative group and O for the clinical outcome.The retrieved articles were critically analyzed and categorized according to their grade of recommendation and the strength of the presented evidence in the following manner:
Abstract. The functional role of the NO synthase (NOS) isoforms in the normal or diseased kidney is uncertain. This study examined the renal expression of the endothelial (eNOS), neuronal (nNOS), and inducible (iNOS) isoforms by both immunohistochemistry and Western blot analyses in shamoperated rats (S) and in rats subjected to 5/6 nephrectomy (Nx). Primary antibodies from two different sources were used to detect iNOS. Additional S and Nx rats were chronically treated with aminoguanidine (AG), a selective iNOS inhibitor. All three isoforms were clearly expressed in S kidney. Their renal abundance, evaluated by Western blot analysis, fell in Nx rats. With the use of anti-iNOS antibodies from two distinct sources, the immunohistochemical analysis showed the presence of what appeared to be two distinct iNOS fractions: a "tubular" fraction, present in S and with decreased intensity in Nx; and an "interstitial" fraction, observed only in inflamed areas of Nx rats. AG treatment greatly attenuated renal injury in Nx rats by a direct antiinflammatory effect, likely related to iNOS inhibition, rather than to amelioration of renal hemodynamics or to reduced protein glycation. These observations suggest that: (1) the functional role of the renal iNOS isoform may vary dramatically under different physiologic conditions; (2) caution should be taken in the interpretation of immunohistochemical iNOS data, because antibodies from different sources may detect different iNOS fractions; and (3) AG treatment may become useful in the treatment of human progressive nephropathies, even those not associated with diabetes or aging.
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