Abstract
Fluorescence microscopy was used to examine the effect of cyclosporine (CsA) infusion on renal subcapsular (cortical) blood flow in 53 living mice, using FITC-dextran (MW: 156,000) as a fluorescent marker. CsA (8-19 mg/kg body weight) given i.v. for 1 min induced complete inhibition of blood flow. A complete standstill of flow was also obtained during a continuous infusion with a rate of 0.8-2 mg/kg/min. With lower infusion rates (0.15-0.23 mg/kg/min), blood flow was partially impaired. In all experiments, the decrease in flow occurred after a 15-25 min delay, suggesting a CsA metabolite or exhaustion of a protective mechanism as the causative agent. Pretreatment with an alpha-blocking agent, phentolamine (1.0 mg/kg), did not prevent the CsA-induced inhibition of blood flow. In contrast, pretreatment with a calcium antagonist, verapamil (0.3-0.4 mg/kg), prevented the impairment of blood flow at low (0.15-0.23 mg/kg/min), and partially at higher (0.8-2.4 mg/kg/min) rates of CsA infusion. Clinical studies are warranted to explore the role of calcium antagonists in the prevention of posttransplant acute cyclosporine-induced nephrotoxicity.
Published Version
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