Abstract
Abstract
To investigate the possible protective effect of Ca2+ blockers in ischemic acute renal failure (ARF), verapamil, in a dose of 10 μg/kg body wt/min was administered for 100 min, starting 15 min before the total occlusion of the left renal artery after right nephrectomy in rats. Mean 24-hr creatinine clearance, blood urea, and serum creatinine levels, 24 hr after declamping, were used as a measure of kidney function. These values which were 135 ± 1.9 μliter/min, 231 ± 22 mg%, and 2.25 ± 0.22 mg%, respectively, in the untreated rats, were found to be significantly different, i.e., 326.3 ± 33.2 μliter/min, P < 0.001, 112 ± 25 mg%, P < 0.001, and 1.26 ± 0.28 mg%, P < 0.01, respectively, in the verapamil-treated animals. Increased 24-hr total urine creatinine, sodium, osmolality, and a lower fractional excretion of sodium were also observed in the verapamil-treated rats with ARF. The combination of propranolol 1 mg/kg body wt/min and verapamil 10 μg/kg body wt/min for 100 min had no additive effect on renal function. In another group of ARF rats in which verapamil was started after declamping, no alleviating effect was observed. It is concluded that verapamil, an inhibitor of cellular membrane transport, when given prior to the renal ischemia, offers a partial but significant protection in this model of ischemic ARF.
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