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1 March 2001 Early Detection of Radiation-Induced Glomerular Injury by Albumin Permeability Assay
Mukut Sharma, Ram Sharma, Xiu Li Ge, Brian L. Fish, Ellen T. McCarthy, Virginia J. Savin, Eric P. Cohen, John E. Moulder
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Abstract

Sharma, M., Sharma, R., McCarthy, E. T., Ge, X. L., Fish, B. L., Savin, V. J., Cohen, E. P. and Moulder, J. E. Early Detection of Radiation-Induced Glomerular Injury by Albumin Permeability Assay.

Renal irradiation leads predictably to glomerular vascular injury, cell lysis, matrix accumulation, sclerosis and loss of renal function. The immediate effects of renal irradiation that may be associated with glomerular pathology and proteinuria are not clear in the human disease or its rat model. We hypothesized that radiation-induced injury causes immediate and subtle alterations in glomerular physiology independent of the neurohumoral and hemodynamic regulatory mechanisms. We employed a sensitive in vitro functional assay of glomerular albumin permeability (Palb) to demonstrate radiation-induced damage to the glomerular filtration barrier immediately after total-body irradiation of rats. In blinded experiments, control rats were sham-treated, and experimental rats received 9.5 Gy X rays. Rats were killed humanely at 1 h to 9 weeks after irradiation and glomeruli were isolated. In parallel experiments, glomeruli were isolated from normal rats and irradiated in vitro. The change in glomerular capillary permeability due to an experimental oncotic gradient was determined using videomicroscopy and Palb was calculated. Results show that in vivo or in vitro irradiation of glomeruli caused an increased Palb at 1 h. Increased Palb was observed up to 3 weeks after irradiation. Glomeruli from mice irradiated with 9.5 or 19.0 Gy X rays did not show increased Palb at 1 h postirradiation. We conclude that glomerular protein permeability of irradiated rats increases in a dose-dependent manner immediately after irradiation and that it appears to be independent of hemodynamic or systemic influences.

Mukut Sharma, Ram Sharma, Xiu Li Ge, Brian L. Fish, Ellen T. McCarthy, Virginia J. Savin, Eric P. Cohen, and John E. Moulder "Early Detection of Radiation-Induced Glomerular Injury by Albumin Permeability Assay," Radiation Research 155(3), 474-480, (1 March 2001). https://doi.org/10.1667/0033-7587(2001)155[0474:EDORIG]2.0.CO;2
Received: 11 July 2000; Accepted: 1 November 2000; Published: 1 March 2001
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