When our kidneys are acutely damaged, it can cause necrotic injury, which is the death of cells in the kidney. A new study from Aarhus University has now found that the cell damage spreads over several days after the immediate injury, affecting a larger area of the kidneys. Assistant Professor at the Department of Biomedicine, Ina Maria Schiessl, who is one of the researchers behind the study, which has recently been published in Nature Communications, explains:
“Our study confirms that acute kidney injury, after temporary interruption of organ blood supply, causes significant necrotic injury in the kidneys. However, by repeatedly imaging the same areas of the kidney over a time course of several weeks in living mice, we now show that there is significant injury propagation into previously uninjured areas of the kidney, causing structural damage in those areas,” she says.
And these findings are significant for how we treat patients, she explains:
“Our data document pronounced spread of the initial injury over the first few days after acute kidney injury. This suggests a previously unknown time window for intervention measures to limit further injury and disease progression in the kidneys.”
Can cause permanent kidney damage
Acute kidney injury is a risk factor for chronic kidney disease. In fact, patients with acute kidney injury have an up to 8-times higher risk of developing chronic kidney disease later, even if they initially experience full functional recovery. Chronic kidney disease affects more than 10% of the world’s population and causes a significant burden on respective patients and health care systems. There is no cure for chronic kidney disease and over time the disease may progress into end stage renal failure, leaving patients with only 2 options: dialysis and kidney transplantation.
Researchers have yet to fully understand the transition from acute kidney injury to chronic kidney disease, and as a result, there are no established intervention measures to halt the progression into chronic kidney disease. But Ina Maria Schiessl hopes that this study may bring researchers a step closer to understanding how our kidneys are affected when subjected to acute injuries and what role that may play in the development of chronic disease.
“Our study documented a link between the accumulation of necrotic cell material in the kidney and injury propagation over time. Future work will need to explore if and how the loss of function and chronic kidney disease progression can be halted through targeting or removal of necrotic cell material after acute kidney injury.”
She hopes that the findings will result in new studies further exploring the long-term effects of acute injuries to the kidneys.
The research results - more information:
- Study type: basic research, intravital microscopy of the kidney, animal study with longitudinal follow up.
- Partners: Aarhus University Hospital
- Funding: Novo Nordisk Foundation and AUFF
- Read more in the scientific article: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10362041/
Contact
Assistant Professor, Ina Maria Schiessl
Department of Biomedicine, Health, Aarhus University
Mail: ina.maria.schiessl@biomed.au.dk
Phone.:+4550201222
Journal
Nature Communications
Method of Research
Randomized controlled/clinical trial
Subject of Research
Animals
Article Title
Longitudinal tracking of acute kidney injury reveals injury propagation along the nephron
Article Publication Date
21-Jul-2023