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. 1984 Jun;25(6):906-11.
doi: 10.1038/ki.1984.108.

Beneficial effect of thyroxin on recovery from toxic acute renal failure

Free article

Beneficial effect of thyroxin on recovery from toxic acute renal failure

N J Siegel et al. Kidney Int. 1984 Jun.
Free article

Abstract

To determine the effect of thyroxin (T4) on the recovery from toxic acute renal failure, rats were injected, subcutaneously, with K-dichromate (15 mg/kg) and at the peak of the renal injury, each animal was given either T4 (4 micrograms/100 g body weight, i.p.) or normal saline (NS). The T4-treated rats had significantly better CIn (669 +/- 35 microliter/min/100 g body weight), improved FENa (0.49 +/- 0.05%) and increased UOsm (835 +/- 50 mOsm/kg) as compared to animals given only NS (CIn 422 +/- 27; FENa 1.02 +/- 0.12; and UOsm 613 +/- 23). A similar dose of T4 given to non-injured control rats had no effect on renal function. The beneficial effect of T4 on dichromate injected rats was sustained and lead to more prompt recovery of glomerular function. To eliminate any hemodynamic effects of T4, an isolated perfused kidney preparation was utilized, and kidneys from dichromate injected rats treated with T4 had significantly better CIn, urine flow and FENa compared to rats given NS. Cellular morphology was better preserved in T4-treated animals. These data indicate that treatment with T4 results in enhanced recovery from an acute toxic renal insult and that this beneficial effect is unlikely to be related to nonspecific systemic effects of the hormone.

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