Derivation of urinary dopamine from plasma dopa

1988 ◽  
Vol 75 (5) ◽  
pp. 515-520 ◽  
Author(s):  
Reuven Zimlichman ◽  
Paul D. Levinson ◽  
Gerald Kelly ◽  
Robin Stull ◽  
Harry R. Keiser ◽  
...  

1. We estimated the extent to which circulating dopa (3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine) is the source of urinary dopamine (DA; 3,4-dihydroxyphenethylamine). Tritiated dopa ([3H]dopa) was infused for 90 min into the left renal artery of seven anaesthetized foxhounds, and levels of labelled and unlabelled dopa and DA were measured in the ureteral urine and in the femoral arterial and left renal venous plasma. 2. Only a small percentage of [3H]dopa delivered to the kidneys was excreted as [3H]DA (0.59% from the left kidney, 0.68% from the right); however, the arterial concentration of endogenous dopa (1220 pg/ml) and the renal plasma flows (144 and 141 ml/min by p-aminohippurate clearances) were such that all of the urinary excretion of endogenous DA (about 1 ng/min from each kidney) could be accounted for by uptake and decarboxylation of circulating endogenous dopa. 3. Plasma dopa is the main source of urinary DA.

2016 ◽  
Vol 63 (3) ◽  
pp. 251-254
Author(s):  
Maria Daniela Tănăsescu ◽  
◽  
Marcel Pălămar ◽  
Mihai Ovidiu Comşa ◽  
Alexandru Mincă ◽  
...  

Objectives. Renal artery stenosis, as main cause of renovascular secondary hypertension, is mainly caused by atherosclerosis of large vessels and is clinically characterized by resistant or malignant hypertension, impacting the kidney function to various degrees. The present article brings into attention the case of a patient which developed renal artery stenosis on the left kidney, the same condition occurring 12 years later on the right kidney. Material and method. Our patient was initially diagnosed at the age of 48 with complete occlusion of the left renal artery, for which left nephrectomy was performed, while the right artery was normal. Twelve years later she presents with renal artery stenosis on the right kidney, which is treat by stent-angioplasty. Results. After surgery, the patient’s evolution was positive, with amelioration of the laboratory values, in parallel to the arterial blood pressure. Discussions. The probability that, in the moment of diagnosis of renal artery stenosis with progressive evolution to occlusion caused by atherosclerosis, the other artery would be normal, both seen by ultrasonography and angiography, while years later to develop stenosis, is minimal. Up to present, the literature holds little evidence of such similar cases. Conclusions. In the particular case of patients that were diagnosed with severe renal artery stenosis of atherosclerotic origin and had only one of the arteries affected, it is necessary to keep a permanent monitoring, justified by the risk of development of the same pathology to the other artery


2015 ◽  
Vol 76 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Cinzia Perrino ◽  
Laura Scudiero ◽  
Maria Piera Petretta ◽  
Gabriele Giacomo Schiattarella ◽  
Mario De Laurentis ◽  
...  

Total occlusion of the abdominal aorta is unusual, and potentially catastrophic. It occurs in patients with advanced atherosclerotic occlusive disease, and can cause severe ischemic manifestations, depending on the site of obstruction. Prompt and appropriate diagnostic and therapeutic approaches are important whenever this condition is suspected, in order to avoid a fatal outcome. The development of a complex network of collaterals may prevent the manifestation of acute ischemic phenomena, and cause a delay in diagnosis and treatment. Here we report the clinical case of a 59-year-old man who was referred to our Department for evaluation of renal failure and refractory hypertension. Ultrasonography and 99mTc-DTPA scintigraphy showed a shrunken, non-functioning left kidney, while CT angiography and aortography showed the complete occlusion of the aorta from below the right renal artery down to the bifurcation of both common iliac arteries, with a critical stenosis of the origin of the right renal artery, an occlusion of the left renal artery as well as of the origin of the inferior mesenteric artery. The patient was referred to the surgery department for aorto-bifemoral bypass surgery and re-implantation of the right renal artery.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-4
Author(s):  
Naveen Kumar ◽  
Ashwini P. Aithal ◽  
Anitha Guru ◽  
Satheesha B. Nayak

Imaging technology with its advancement in the field of urology is the boon for the patients who require minimally invasive approaches for various kidney disorders. These approaches require a precise knowledge of the normal and variant anatomy of vascular structures at the hilum of the kidney in terms of their pattern of arrangement and division. The present paper describes a bilateral anomalous arrangement of the structures at the renal hilum as well as their peculiar branching pattern which is of clinical and surgical relevance. Multiple branching of the renal vessels was observed in both kidneys due to which the hila were congested. The right renal artery immediately after its origin divided into 2 branches. The upper branch represented an aberrant artery whereas the lower branch gave 5 divisions. The left renal artery also divided into 2 branches much before the hilum as anterior and posterior divisions. The anterior branch took an arched course and gave 6 branches. The posterior branch gave 3 terminal branches before entering the renal substance. In addition to anomalous hilar structures, normal architecture of both kidneys was altered and the hilum of the left kidney was found on its anterior surface.


1937 ◽  
Vol 66 (6) ◽  
pp. 755-760 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alan R. Moritz ◽  
David Weir

A positive Shwartzman reaction, as indicated by thrombosis and focal hemorrhage in one or more organs, was elicited in 19 of 34 rabbits in which the preparatory injection of bacterial filtrate was made into the left renal artery and the reacting injection was made in the ear vein 24 hours later. In 24 of the 34 rabbits the kidneys were undisturbed throughout the duration of the experiment except for the intra-arterial injection of the left. In 12 of these 24 a positive Shwartzman reaction was observed in the uninjected right kidneys. In only 1 of the 24 injected left kidneys were there changes that might be construed as representing a positive Shwartzman reaction. The changes in this kidney consisted of glomerular thrombosis, not associated with hemorrhage or necrosis. The positive renal Shwartzman reactions seen in the right kidneys were similar to those reported by Apitz and Gerber as representing the renal changes occurring as part of a generalized Shwartzman reaction. The retention of the bacterial filtrate of the preparatory injection in the left kidney, by obstructing both vein and artery for 15 minutes, did not lessen the refractory state. The removal of the right kidney prior to the experiment, with the subsequent demonstration that circulation through the remaining left kidney was not impaired by the intra-arterial injection of filtrate, indicated that the refractory state of the injected kidney was not the result of failure of the reacting dose of filtrate to reach the kidney. In the unilaterally nephrectomized rabbits the development of a positive reaction in other organs indicated that the lack of reaction in the kidney represented a local refractory state. No explanation of the phenomenon was disclosed by these experiments.


Author(s):  
Christine U. Lee ◽  
James F. Glockner

71-year-old woman with gradually increasing dyspnea, atrial fibrillation, and pulmonary hypertension Coronal fat-suppressed postgadolinium 3D SPGR images (Figure 16.4.1) reveal large varicosities replacing much of the right kidney. Note the enlarged left renal artery and vein and varicosities in the lower pole of the left kidney. Axial T1-weighted FSE images (...


1984 ◽  
Vol 23 (02) ◽  
pp. 75-76
Author(s):  
Q.-M. Ji ◽  
Y.-C. Wang ◽  
J. Zhang ◽  
X.-C. Shi ◽  
Y. Wang ◽  
...  

Summary 11C-benzoic acid prepared in a radiochemical purity over 90% was studied radiopharmacologically in mice and rabbits. The uptake of 11C-benzoate in ICR mice increased quickly. The ratio of kidney uptake rate to that in other organs reached values between 9 and 55 with a maximum at 10 min after i.v. injection. Gamma camera imaging of rabbits showed that uptake in the kidneys began at 2 min after injection and that activity began to appear in the bladder 4 min later. Rabbits with left renal artery ligature showed no uptake in the left kidney but the right kidney was imaged to the same extent as that of a rabbit without artery ligature. The kidney imaging of 11C-benzoic acid may be a useful method for renal diagnosis.


1965 ◽  
Vol 209 (1) ◽  
pp. 199-214 ◽  
Author(s):  
Henry D. Lauson ◽  
Manuel Bocanegra ◽  
Carlos F. Beuzeville

The fraction of vasopressin removed from portal venous plasma by the liver (hepatic portal extraction ratio) was estimated in conscious, hydrated female dogs. Antidiuretic responses to physiological doses of beef Pitressin (Parke, Davis) given as 5-min infusions via a splenic vein catheter were compared with responses to the same dose infused via a foreleg vein. The fraction of vasopressin removed during passage through the left kidney was estimated in experiments of analogous design. Antidiuretic responses of the right kidney to physiological does given as 5-min infusions via a catheter implanted transaortically in the left renal artery were compared with responses of the right kidney to the same dose given via a foreleg vein. Infusions were given by the alternate routes at hourly intervals. The hepatic portal extraction ratio for vasopressin averaged 12%. The renal extraction ratio averaged 25%. The renal extraction ratio, estimated by bioassay of arterial and renal venous plasma, was somewhat smaller (20%) in anesthetized dogs in which the concentration of vasopressin in the plasma was raised to unphysiologically high values by a constant infusion of beef Pitressin. From measurements of plasma flow through these organs and the extraction ratios, the clearances of vasopressin in the liver and both kidneys were calculated. The respective estimates, expressed as percent of plasma volume cleared per minute, were: hepatic, 4.6; renal (physiological plasma concentrations), 9.4; and renal (high plasma concentrations), 5.8.


2018 ◽  
Vol 52 (6) ◽  
pp. 455-458
Author(s):  
Rogerio A. Muñoz-Vigna ◽  
Javier E. Anaya-Ayala ◽  
Juan N. Ramirez-Robles ◽  
Daniel Nuño-Diaz ◽  
Sandra Olivares-Cruz

The use of kidney grafts with aneurysmal disease involving the renal arteries for transplantation is very uncommon and relatively controversial. We herein present the case of a 52-year-old woman who volunteered to become a living-nonrelated donor; during the preoperative imaging workup, a computed tomography angiography revealed a 1.5-cm saccular aneurysm in the left kidney, while the contralateral renal artery was normal. We decided to utilize the left kidney for a 25-year-old male patient with end-stage renal disease, and following the ex vivo repair using the recipient epigastric vessels and saphenous veins, we completed the transplantation in the right pelvic fossa. The postoperative period was uneventful, and at 8 months from the surgery, the graft remains functional. The surgical repair of renal artery aneurysms followed by immediate kidney transplantation is a safe technique and an effective replacement therapy for recipients. The incidental finding of isolated aneurysmal disease in renal arteries should not exclude graft potential availability for transplantation following repair.


Author(s):  
Cristian MARTONOS ◽  
Cristian DEZDROBITU ◽  
Florin STAN ◽  
Aurel DAMIAN ◽  
Alexandru GUDEA

For the present study a number of 5 female chinchilla carcasses were used. The animals were slaughtered for commercial purpuses (fur). The anatomical dissection started with the identification of the aorta (Aorta abdominalis). The next step was the intra-arterial injection of a colouring substance. The carcasses was fixed in the formaldehyde solution and subsequently the renal arteries were dissected. The first renal artery was the right renal artery (Arteria renalis dextra) and, at 0,5 cm caudally, the left renal artery (Arteria renalis sinister) arose . The origin of those arteries were disposed on the lateral part of the abdominal aorta.The origin, traject and distribution of renal arteries on the studied species have a high degree of similarity with the literature dates described for leporids.


2021 ◽  
Vol 36 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Eva Paraskevi Andronikidi ◽  
Glykeria Tsouka ◽  
Myrto Giannopoulou ◽  
Konstantinos Botsakis ◽  
Xanthi Benia ◽  
...  

Abstract Background and Aims Renal transplantation is considered the most effective and less costly modality of renal replacement therapy in patients with end stage renal disease. The disparity between kidney allografts and recipients has led to a global effort to increase the pool of kidney donors. Accordingly, fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD) is no longer considered an absolute contraindication for kidney donation. The incidence of FMD is about 2.3%-5.8% in potential kidney donors. There are few cases in the literature where renal artery stenosis in allografts with known pre-transplantation FMD became worse after transplantation, indicating the importance of a proper follow up in the recipients. This is a case of a living kidney donor with no history of hypertension, proteinuria or elevated serum creatinine, whose intra-arterial digital subtraction angiography revealed FMD lesions in the left renal artery. Method Case report Results A 54-year-old Caucasian female with medical history of hypothyroidism took the decision to offer her kidney to her 37-year-old son who was diagnosed with end-stage renal disease five years ago secondary to diabetes mellitus type I. She had no history for diabetes, hypertension and renal disease. Her vital signs on admission were heart rate of 78 beats/min and blood pressure of 130/70 mmHg. Urinalysis, biochemical profile and serological evaluations were all within normal ranges. Blood urea was 36 mg/dL and serum creatinine was 0.6 mg/dL (eGFR 97ml/min/1.73m2). The abdominal ultrasound and renogram with Tc-99m DTPA showed no remarkable findings. On intra-arterial digital subtraction angiography an abnormal succession of dilatations and multifocal stenoses of the left renal artery, characteristic of medial FMD, was found. The right renal artery was normal. Apart from a dysfunctional permanent left femoral catheter, the patient had no other vascular access for hemodialysis because of Superior Vena Cava syndrome, so he needed urgent transplantation. Taking all of these into consideration, the patient was offered renal transplantation as the best option. A left open donor nephrectomy was performed; the renal artery was divided distal to the stenotic dysplastic area. The allograft was placed at the right iliac fossa of the recipient with arterial and venous anastomosis to the extrarenal iliac vessels. Post-operatively, the recipient had a delayed graft function lasted 13 days. On renal artery Doppler in the allograft we found increased resistance index (RI) that gradually normalized without any intervention. An immunosuppressive regiment of tacrolimus, mycophenolate and prednisone was administered according to our center protocol. At discharge serum creatinine was 1.7 mg/dL (eGFR: 50ml/min/1.73m2). At the year follow-up, the donor was normotensive and had near normal renal function (Cr:1.3mg/dL, eGFR: 70ml/min/1.73m2). The recipient has a well-controlled blood pressure receiving two antihypertensive drugs and maintains a satisfactory renal function. Conclusion Few cases with FMD in renal allografts from living and deceased donors have been described. In a review of 4 studies the authors concluded that the outcome of transplantation with allografts from living donors with medial FMD was satisfactory and these allografts could be used to increase the donor pool. Furthermore, it is strongly recommended to have a thorough pre-transplantation check of the donor as well as a close monitoring of both the donor and recipient after transplantation. This case shows that allografts harvested from carefully selected donors with renal arterial FMD can be successfully used, particularly in urgent conditions. Detailed pre-tranplantation imaging of donor’s renal arteries, selection of the appropriate screening method, as well as close monitoring of both donor and recipient for early interventions after transplantation is of paramount importance.


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