85 research outputs found

    A re-appraisal of volume status and renal function impairment in chronic heart failure: combined effects of pre-renal failure and venous congestion on renal function

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    The association between cardiac failure and renal function impairment has gained wide recognition over the last decade. Both structural damage in the form of systemic atherosclerosis and (patho) physiological hemodynamic changes may explain this association. As regards hemodynamic factors, renal impairment in chronic heart failure is traditionally assumed to be mainly due to a decrease in cardiac output and a subsequent decrease in renal perfusion. This will lead to a decrease in glomerular filtration rate and a compensatory increase in tubular sodium retention. The latter is a physiological renal response aimed at retaining fluids in order to increase cardiac filling pressure and thus renal perfusion. In heart failure, however, larger increases in cardiac filling pressure are needed to restore renal perfusion and thus more volume retention. In this concept, in chronic heart failure, an equilibrium exists where a certain degree of congestion is the price to be paid to maintain adequate renal perfusion and function. Recently, this hypothesis was challenged by new studies, wherein it was found that the association between right-sided cardiac filling pressures and renal function is bimodal, with worse renal function at the highest filling pressures, reflecting a severely congested state. Renal hemodynamic studies suggest that congestion negatively affects renal function in particular in patients in whom renal perfusion is also compromised. Thus, an interplay between cardiac forward failure and backward failure is involved in the renal function impairment in the congestive state, presumably along with other factors. Only few data are available on the impact of intervention in volume status on the cardio-renal interaction. Sparse data in cardiac patients as well as evidence from cohorts with primary renal disease suggest that specific targeting of volume overload may be beneficial for long-term outcome, in spite of a certain further decrease in renal function, at least in the context of current treatment where possible reflex neurohumoral activation is ameliorated by the background treatment by blockers of the renin–angiotensin–aldosterone system

    Identification of Retinoic Acid in a High Content Screen for Agents that Overcome the Anti-Myogenic Effect of TGF-Beta-1

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    Transforming growth factor beta 1 (TGF-Ξ²1) is an inhibitor of muscle cell differentiation that is associated with fibrosis, poor regeneration and poor function in some diseases of muscle. When neutralizing antibodies to TGF-Ξ²1 or the angiotensin II inhibitor losartan were used to reduce TGF-Ξ²1 signaling, muscle morphology and function were restored in mouse models of Marfan Syndrome and muscular dystrophy. The goal of our studies was to identify additional agents that overcome the anti-myogenic effect of TGF-Ξ²1.A high-content cell-based assay was developed in a 96-well plate format that detects the expression of myosin heavy chain (MHC) in C2C12 cells. The assay was used to quantify the dose-dependent responses of C2C12 cell differentiation to TGF-Ξ²1 and to the TGF-Ξ²1 Type 1 receptor kinase inhibitor, SB431542. Thirteen agents previously described as promoting C2C12 differentiation in the absence of TGF-Ξ²1 were screened in the presence of TGF-Ξ²1. Only all-trans retinoic acid and 9-cis retinoic acid allowed a maximal level of C2C12 cell differentiation in the presence of TGF-Ξ²1; the angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor captopril and 10 nM estrogen provided partial rescue. Vitamin D was a potent inhibitor of retinoic acid-induced myogenesis in the presence of TGF-Ξ²1. TGF-Ξ²1 inhibits myoblast differentiation through activation of Smad3; however, retinoic acid did not inhibit TGF-Ξ²1-induced activation of a Smad3-dependent reporter gene in C2C12 cells.Retinoic acid alleviated the anti-myogenic effect of TGF-Ξ²1 by a Smad3-independent mechanism. With regard to the goal of improving muscle regeneration and function in individuals with muscle disease, the identification of retinoic acid is intriguing in that some retinoids are already approved for human therapy. However, retinoids also have well-described adverse effects. The quantitative, high-content assay will be useful to screen for less-toxic retinoids or combinations of agents that promote myoblast differentiation in the presence of TGF-Ξ²1

    ADDITIVE ANTIPROTEINURIC EFFECT OF ANGIOTENSIN-CONVERTING ENZYME-INHIBITION AND NONSTEROIDAL ANTIINFLAMMATORY DRUG-THERAPY - A CLUE TO THE MECHANISM OF ACTION

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    1. Both the angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor, lisinopril, and the non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug, indomethacin, lower urinary protein excretion in renal disease and improve the selectivity of the residual proteinuria. Despite the clearly different renal haemodynamic profiles of the two drugs, we hypothesize that the antiproteinuric effect has a final common pathway that is a reduction in glomerular filtration pressure. 2. We studied the effects of lisinopril and indomethacin, separately and in combination, on urinary protein excretion, selectivity of proteinuria and renal haemodynamics in nine non-diabetic patients with overt proteinuria. 3. Urinary protein excretion was 5.4 +/- 2.5 g/24 h in the control period. Lisinopril monotherapy lowered urinary protein excretion by 53 +/- 26%. During indomethacin treatment urinary protein excretion was reduced by 63 +/- 24%. After adding indomethacin to lisinopril, urinary protein excretion fell by a further 58 +/- 23%, resulting in a 79 +/- 17% decrease during combined therapy. 4. Although both lisinopril and indomethacin monotherapy appeared to result in an improvement in glomerular protein permselectivity, no further improvement was seen during the combination therapy. 5. The changes in proteinuria were associated with changes in glomerular filtration rate, which showed a pronounced fall with combination therapy. The renal haemodynamic profiles during the different therapies suggest a post-glomerular vasodilatation by lisinopril and a pre-glomerular vasoconstriction by indomethacin, and the combination of both during the combined treatment. 6. These data suggest a synchronous afterload and preload reduction of glomerular filtration pressure as the cause of the additive effect of the combination of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug therapy in lowering glomerular filtration rate and proteinuria
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