Assessment of the viability of renal cells following an ischaemic insult

Renal transplantation is the best treatment for end-stage renal failure. The relative shortage of organs may be addressed by transplanting kidneys from non heart-beating donors (NHBD). This thesis addresses the results of transplantation from NHBD and how they may be improved, with emphasis on the s...

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Main Author: Butterworth, Paul Charles
Published: University of Leicester 2003
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616
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.275486
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-2754862016-12-08T03:25:45ZAssessment of the viability of renal cells following an ischaemic insultButterworth, Paul Charles2003Renal transplantation is the best treatment for end-stage renal failure. The relative shortage of organs may be addressed by transplanting kidneys from non heart-beating donors (NHBD). This thesis addresses the results of transplantation from NHBD and how they may be improved, with emphasis on the search for a pre-transplant test of viability. In Chapter 1 the role of NHBD kidney transplantation in addressing the organ shortage is reviewed. Chapter 2 presents the results of the Leicester kidney transplant programme. Kidneys from NHBD show a higher rate of primary non-function than cadaveric donor kidneys but there is no difference in graft survival. A reliable viability test would prevent the transplantation of kidneys severely damaged by ischaemia and so improve results. In Chapter 3 viability testing in renal transplantation is reviewed. Chapter 4 describes experiments resulting in the development and testing of an in vitro model of warm ischaemia. Cultured pig and human tubular epithelial cells were found to be tolerant of anoxia in this model. In Chapter 5 the anaerobic metabolism of these cells is studied. Lactate is produced by glycolysis even in oxygenated conditions. Differences between the metabolism of tubular cells in vivo and in vitro, prevent in vitro modeling of warm ischaemia. In Chapter 6 the utility of detection of apoptosis in pre-transplant biopsies in predicting transplant function is investigated. Apoptosis is seen in the juxta-cortical medulla of NHBD kidneys but not in the cortex. Cadaveric donor kidneys show no apoptosis. The presence of apoptosis does not predict transplant function. In Chapter 7 the utility of histomorphometric analysis of interstitial fibrosis in the assessment of kidney quality is studied. Kidneys from NHBD have more severe interstitial fibrosis than cadaveric kidneys but the difference is small and correlation with transplant function is poor. In Chapter 8 the findings of these experiments are summarized and the future of viability testing in renal transplantation is discussed.616MedicineUniversity of Leicesterhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.275486http://hdl.handle.net/2381/29422Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 616
Medicine
spellingShingle 616
Medicine
Butterworth, Paul Charles
Assessment of the viability of renal cells following an ischaemic insult
description Renal transplantation is the best treatment for end-stage renal failure. The relative shortage of organs may be addressed by transplanting kidneys from non heart-beating donors (NHBD). This thesis addresses the results of transplantation from NHBD and how they may be improved, with emphasis on the search for a pre-transplant test of viability. In Chapter 1 the role of NHBD kidney transplantation in addressing the organ shortage is reviewed. Chapter 2 presents the results of the Leicester kidney transplant programme. Kidneys from NHBD show a higher rate of primary non-function than cadaveric donor kidneys but there is no difference in graft survival. A reliable viability test would prevent the transplantation of kidneys severely damaged by ischaemia and so improve results. In Chapter 3 viability testing in renal transplantation is reviewed. Chapter 4 describes experiments resulting in the development and testing of an in vitro model of warm ischaemia. Cultured pig and human tubular epithelial cells were found to be tolerant of anoxia in this model. In Chapter 5 the anaerobic metabolism of these cells is studied. Lactate is produced by glycolysis even in oxygenated conditions. Differences between the metabolism of tubular cells in vivo and in vitro, prevent in vitro modeling of warm ischaemia. In Chapter 6 the utility of detection of apoptosis in pre-transplant biopsies in predicting transplant function is investigated. Apoptosis is seen in the juxta-cortical medulla of NHBD kidneys but not in the cortex. Cadaveric donor kidneys show no apoptosis. The presence of apoptosis does not predict transplant function. In Chapter 7 the utility of histomorphometric analysis of interstitial fibrosis in the assessment of kidney quality is studied. Kidneys from NHBD have more severe interstitial fibrosis than cadaveric kidneys but the difference is small and correlation with transplant function is poor. In Chapter 8 the findings of these experiments are summarized and the future of viability testing in renal transplantation is discussed.
author Butterworth, Paul Charles
author_facet Butterworth, Paul Charles
author_sort Butterworth, Paul Charles
title Assessment of the viability of renal cells following an ischaemic insult
title_short Assessment of the viability of renal cells following an ischaemic insult
title_full Assessment of the viability of renal cells following an ischaemic insult
title_fullStr Assessment of the viability of renal cells following an ischaemic insult
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of the viability of renal cells following an ischaemic insult
title_sort assessment of the viability of renal cells following an ischaemic insult
publisher University of Leicester
publishDate 2003
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.275486
work_keys_str_mv AT butterworthpaulcharles assessmentoftheviabilityofrenalcellsfollowinganischaemicinsult
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