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  • Title: Renal collateral blood supply after acute unilateral renal artery occlusion.
    Author: Hessel SJ, Gerson DE, Bass A, Dowgialo IT, Hollenberg NK, Abrams HL.
    Journal: Invest Radiol; 1975; 10(5):490-9. PubMed ID: 1205708.
    Abstract:
    Preformed arterial collaterals are critical to renal parenchymal survival after acute total renal artery occlusion. This study was designed to delineate and quantify preformed collaterals and assess their response to vasodilators. A Swan-Ganz catheter induced a sudden, total occlusion of a renal artery sufficient to reduce distal arterial pressure to near zero and prevent perfusion through the renal artery. Arteriography assessed the effectiveness of the occlusion and delineated the collateral arterial pathways. Strontium, cerium-, and chromium-labeled microspheres measured renal blood flow and cardiac output 1, 60, and 120 minutes after occlusion. In two additional series of experiments either contralateral nephrectomy was performed 5 to 8 days before the study, or dibenzylene, dopamine, or glucagon were administered in an attempt to increase blood flow through the collaterals. Collateral renal blood flow was demonstrated in all dogs. Mean blood flow to the occluded kidneys ranged from 0.13 +/- 0.05 cm3/minute/g to 0.22 +/- 0.08 cm3/minute/g, about 5% of control values. Neither prior contralateral nephrectomy nor vasodilator agents increased the flow to the obstructed kidneys. In the dogs with intact contralateral kidneys, however, there was a progressive decrease in cardiac output during the experiment, which was not found in uninephrectomized animals. We concluded that preformed arterial channels are available to maintain a small, but probably critical level of perfusion following sudden total occlusion of the renal artery. Neither hypertrophy due to prior contralateral nephrectomy nor active vasodilators modify flow through the preformed channels. It is likely that total renal ischemia provides a maximal stimulus for vasodilatation. The pattern of hind limb collaterals differed strikingly from those of the kidney, with maintenance of a greater portion of a normal flow and rapid increase in flow within 1 hour after femoral artery occlusion. Thus, data concerning collateral circulation cannot be generalized from one vascular bed to another even in the same species.
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