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Title: Development of glomerular lesions in experimental long-term diabetes in the rat. Author: Hirose K, Osterby R, Nozawa M, Gundersen HJ. Journal: Kidney Int; 1982 May; 21(5):689-95. PubMed ID: 6981023. Abstract: Exact parameters for relevant glomerular structures in the course of streptozotocin diabetes in rats with 1 to 18 months' duration were obtained with stereological methods. Renal cortical tissue from diabetic (D) and control animals (C) was processed for light- and electron microscopy and measurements were performed on systematically sampled glomeruli. The thickness of the basement membrane (BM) increased with age in both groups, but the rate of increase was 50% higher in D: 19 +/- 1.2 nm/month (mean +/- SD) vs. 13 +/- 0.9 nm/month, P = 0.0003. The time course of other structural quantities was characterized by the acute changes constituting the glomerular hypertrophy, earlier shown to develop within the first few days of diabetes. All these changes were confirmed in the present study: In the earliest phase the diabetic rats showed an increased total volume of glomeruli, mesangium, and mesangial BM material, as well as an increased surface of the capillary walls. However, none of these differences between the groups showed progression with increasing duration. Mesangial changes corresponding to those of the glomerulopathy in long-term diabetes were not demonstrable within the experimental period. The streptozotocin diabetic rat, therefore, is not useful as a model of advanced diabetic glomerulopathy. But the BM thickness follows the same predictable time course as in human diabetes insofar as moderately advanced cases are concerned. BM thickness is the parameter of choice when a potential effect of different variables on the development of diabetic glomerulopathy is under study.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]