학술논문

Pretreatment with Oxygen Protects Rat Kidney from Cisplatin Nephrotoxicity.
Document Type
Article
Source
Renal Failure. 2010, Vol. 32 Issue 2, p234-242. 9p. 1 Color Photograph, 1 Chart, 4 Graphs.
Subject
*KIDNEY diseases
*NEPHROTOXICOLOGY
*OXYGEN
*CISPLATIN
*REACTIVE oxygen species
*LABORATORY rats
Language
ISSN
0886-022X
Abstract
Cisplatin (CP) nephrotoxicity is mainly due to reactive oxygen species. Oxygen pre-exposure as a mild oxidative stress may enhance some endogenous defense mechanisms, so its effect on cisplatin-induced acute renal failure was investigated in present study. Twenty-four rats were divided into four groups. The O2+ CP and Air + CP groups were were subjected to i.p. injection of 5 mg/kg cisplatin, and in the Air + Saline and O2 + Saline groups, saline was injected instead of cisplatin. O2+ CP and O2+ Saline groups were pretreated with oxygen (3h/d for two days), and the other two groups were pretreated with room air. Cisplatin was administered 24 h after last pretreatment session. Three days after cisplatin injection, plasma samples were obtained, and parts of kidney tissue were frozen for biochemical analysis or fixed in formalin for histological assessments. Preconditioning with oxygen prior to cisplatin administration led to reduced tubular necrosis and luminal cast formation and improvement of renal function, as was evidenced by significant reduction in plasma creatinine and urea levels. Oxygen pretreatment also significantly reversed cisplatin-induced reduction in renal catalase activity and glutathione level. It could be concluded that oxygen pretreatment could have a delayed protective effect against cisplatin nephrotoxicity, and that increased renal catalase activity may be involved in this protective effect of hyperoxia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]