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Title: The effect of protein restriction on the severity and recovery from ischemic renal failure. Author: Seguro AC, Shimizu MH, Campos SB, Rocha AS. Journal: Ren Fail; 1990; 12(4):249-55. PubMed ID: 2100829. Abstract: The effects of chronic dietary protein restriction on ischemic renal failure were evaluated in rats subjected to 90 min of bilateral renal clamping. The rats were kept on either 20% casein (regular) diet or casein-free (protein-free) diet 10 days before and 21 days after renal injury. Rats on regular protein diet showed higher levels of BUN and serum creatinine and had a lower inulin clearance (microliter/min/100 g BW) than animals on protein-free diet (289 +/- 34 vs 582 +/- 103, p less than 0.05) 2 days after ischemia. However, the inulin clearance measured 21 days following ischemia was significantly higher in rats on regular diet (1468 +/- 181) than those maintained on protein-free diet after ischemia (560 +/- 167). When unilateral 90 min ischemia was performed in rats on regular diet, the postischemic kidneys showed an incomplete recovery of the inulin clearance (226 +/- 35) compared to the contralateral kidney (900 +/- 116), 21 days after ischemia; whereas in rats on a protein-free diet the inulin clearance averaged 106 +/- 17 in the postischemic kidney and 345 +/- 41 in the right kidney. When left renal ischemia and contralateral nephrectomy were performed, the inulin clearance was 1149 +/- 74 in rats on regular diet and 534 +/- 60 in rats on protein-free diet, 21 days following renal insult. These results suggest that protein restriction can play a protective role against renal ischemia in an initial phase, but it limits the late recovery from ischemia. The presence of a normal contralateral kidney inhibits the functional recovery of the postischemic kidney and a contralateral nephrectomy produces a compensatory functional hypertrophy of the postischemic kidney, even in rats on a protein-free diet.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]