In our cohort of patients with severe rhabdomyolysis the level of serum CK predicted the development of ARF. Although our results suggest that series of CK determination might be beneficial for the evaluation of the effect of therapy, the value of CK determination as a prognostic tool is limited, given the wide range of CK levels.
Background-Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) metabolizes many small peptides and plays a key role in blood pressure regulation. Elevated serum ACE is claimed to be associated with an increased risk for cardiovascular disease. Previously, two families with dramatically increased serum ACE were described, but no systematic survey of affected individuals was performed, and the molecular background of this trait is unknown. Methods and Results-Eight families were identified with autosomal dominant inheritance of a dramatic (5-fold) increase of serum ACE activity. Strikingly, no clinical abnormalities were apparent in the affected subjects. Isolated blood cells were used for genetic and biochemical analysis. The level of ACE expression on the blood leukocytes and dendritic cells and total cell-associated ACE of the affected individuals was similar to that in nonaffected relatives; however membrane-bound mutant ACE was much more efficiently clipped from the cell surface compared with its wild-type counterpart. A point mutation causing Pro1199Leu in the stalk region of the ACE molecule cosegregates with the increase in serum ACE (LOD score, 6.63). Conclusions-A point mutation in the stalk region of the ACE protein causes increased shedding, leading to increased serum ACE, whereas cell-bound ACE is unaltered, and affected individuals exhibit no clinical abnormalities. These findings qualify the importance of serum ACE and establish a new determinant of ACE solubilization. (Circulation.
The glomerular filtration rate (GFR) was determined in rats with an isogeneic kidney transplant and compared with that of unilaterally nephrectomized rats. Experiments were carried out in adult rats, 3 months of age, weighing approximately 300 g, as well as in juvenile rats, 6 to 8 weeks of age, weighing approximately 170 g. All donor kidneys were taken from adult rats. The GFR was measured regularly, using a chromium 51-EDTA clearance technique which permitted repeated measurements to be taken in the same animals, during a 15-week followup period. After unilateral nephrectomy the GFR per 100 g body weight (BW) increased compared with that of a single normal kidney. Adult transplant recipients had a GFR per 100 g BW of about 80% of that of unilaterally nephrectomized rats. There was no statistical difference in the GFR when comparing adult recipients of either a normal or a hyperfunctional kidney. When isografts were transplanted to juvenile recipients, there was an initial decrease in the absolute GFR compared with the donor value in the case of a normal adult donor kidney. This decrease was even more pronounced when a hyperfunctioning kidney was transplanted to a juvenile recipient. However, when related to BW the GFR was, as in the adult recipients, about 80% of that of unilaterally nephrectomized juvenile rats. During the followup period the systolic blood pressure was measured regularly by tail plethysmography, in order to detect any blood pressure elevations, which are a frequent complication in adult and pediatric human renal transplantation. However, no hypertension was observed after isogeneic kidney transplantation in the various groups. These results show that the GFR of isogeneically transplanted rat kidneys amounts to about 80% of the maximally attainable level. Isogeneic transplantation of an adult kidney to a juvenile recipient results in a rapid adaptation of the GFR to the smaller size of the body and does not cause an increase in blood pressure.
Pseudothrombocytopenia is usually associated with blood specimens anticoagulated with ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid (EDTA) or other anticoagulants. It may be caused by temperature-independent, EDTA-dependent antibodies of the immunoglobulin-M (IgM) type. Here a patient with EDTA-independent and temperature-independent pseudothrombocytopenia mediated by IgM or IgM-containing immune complex is reported, and a reliable method is described for a proper counting of platelets in such cases.
Clearance methods, allowing for repeated use in the same animals, were applied in a cross-sectional study to establish the normal increase in renal function in rats. It was shown that the glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and the effective renal plasma flow (ERPF) per gram of kidney was low in the 4-week-old rats. Levels comparable to those of adult rats were reached at an age of about 7 weeks. From that age on the GFR and the ERPF, as well as kidney weight, increased at a lower rate than did the body weight. The present findings, obtained by these rather simple techniques are, in general, concurrent with data from the literature on the development and maturation of renal function in rats.
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