A B S T R A C T To determine whether the increased filtration of serum proteins after glomerular injury is the consequence of altered electrostatic properties of the glomerular capillary wall, we measured fractional clearances of the anionic polymer, dextran sulfate, in nine Munich-Wistar rats in the early autologous phase of nephrotoxic serum nephritis (NSN). In agreement with previous studies from this laboratory, whole kidney and single nephron glomerular filtration rates were normal in NSN rats despite histological evidence of glomerular injury, and despite a marked reduction in the glomerular capillary ultrafiltration coefficient to approximately one-third of normal. In the companion study (9), it was shown that in NSN rats the mean fractional clearances of neutral dextrans over the range of effective molecular radii from 18 to 42 A were reduced, compared to normal.In contrast, in the present study the mean fractional clearances for dextran sulfate over the same range of molecular radii were significantly greater than those found previously for normal Munich-Wistar rats. The fractional clearance of dextran sulfate molecules of the t Ms. Rasmussen died on 25 June 1975.
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Renal lymph-to-renal vein concentration ratios (CL/CV) for neutral dextrans (18-42 A effective radii) and endogenous serum albumin were measured in rats before and during acute colume expansion with isoncotic plasma or Ringer solution. Under all conditions studied, CL/CV decreased with increasing dextran size, in normal hydropenia falling from 0.93 +/- 0.03 SE at 18 A to 0.24 +/- 0.02 a 42 A (n = 12). Albumin (36 A pradius) behaved in a manner similar to a 40 A dextran, CL/CV averaging 0.33 +/- 0.03 (n = 12) in hydropenia. For all dextran sizes studied and for albumin, CL/CV decreased markedly during either form of volume expansion. Ringer loading produced significantly greater decreases in CL/CV for the larger dextrans and albumin than did plasma loading, and also resulted in much greater increases in renal lymph flow, while causing increases in whole kidney fluid reabsorption similar to those with plasma loading. With a compartmental model in which diffusion of dextrans and albumin from capillary lumen to interstitium is opposed by capillary uptake of tubule reabsorbate, these results are interpreted to indicate that connective reflection coefficients for dextrans with radii great than or equal to 36 A and albumin are essentially equal to 1. Indirect evidence is therefore provided that albumin and the larger globulins exert their full osmotic pressures across the walls of peritubular capillaries.
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