Topography of focal proximal tubular necrosis after ischemia with reflow in the rat kidney
- PMID: 3953769
- PMCID: PMC1888206
Topography of focal proximal tubular necrosis after ischemia with reflow in the rat kidney
Abstract
The topography of renal injury after ischemia-reflow was studied in intact rats by clamping the right renal artery for variable periods of time and examining the histologic appearance of the kidney in large 1-mu plastic sections. As reported by others, the straight portion of the proximal tubule (S3) was especially susceptible to ischemia-reflow injury. The pattern of focal necrosis produced in S3 by short (15-30-minute) and longer (45-60-minute) periods of arterial occlusion appeared related to gradients to oxygenation during reflow, in that more extensive injury was seen in areas remote from blood vessels, while perivascular tubules were protected. A similar pattern was seen in S1 and S2 after a longer period (45-60-minutes) of ischemia, which produced extensive but incomplete necrosis in these convoluted segments, with protected tubules lying within zones surrounding arcuate and interlobular arteries. The immediate postglomerular portion of S1, a tubular segment normally well supplied with oxygen, was an exception to this rule. Selective necrosis limited to this portion of the nephron appeared after only 15-30 minutes of ischemia, recalling the special sensitivity of S1 cells to inhibition of mitochondrial respiration. These results suggest that in different segments of the proximal tubule, injury after ischemia-reflow is determined not only by changes that occur during complete ischemia but also by the adequacy of oxygenation during the reflow period.
References
Publication types
MeSH terms
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Other Literature Sources
Research Materials