Abstrakt: |
A number of studies support, and others fail to support, the concept that the renin-angiotensin system plays a key role in the pathogenesis of acute renal failure. This study, employing active and passive immunization against angiotensin II, was designed to examine the primacy of circulating angiotensin as a mediator of this syndrome. Neither mode of immunization significantly affected the degree of azotemia or the marked reduction of inulin clearance expected in rats subjected to glycerol-induced myohemoglobinuria. Twenty-four hours after challenge, inulin clearance (Cin) in actively immunized rats fell to 3.2% of control and that of unimmunized rats given the same dose of glycerol was 2.5% of control. Although there was some variation among groups of passively immunized rats, Cin of one group being 18% of control, Cin of the other groups was less than 3% of control. The dose and binding capacity of the immune globulin used here were essentially the same as those reported in another study in which immunization was thought to be of prophylactic value in rats subjected to s.c. administered glycerol injections. Technologic differences unrelated to immunization are suggested to have caused the difference in results in the two studies, and it seems doubtful that circulating angiotensin plays a key role in the pathogenesis of myohemoglobinuric acute renal failure in the rat. |