Abstract

Albuminuria at the rate of 500 μg/24 h was observed in rats treated with 50 mg/kg body wt. i. v. streptozotocin (STZ). When STZ was combined with heparin, administered twice daily (250 IU/kg subcutaneous injection) after 24 h following STZ injection, the daily urinary albumin excretion (U-AE) was less than half the amount found in non-heparinized rats (280.3 μg/24 h). The observation period in both instances was 8 weeks. When animals were permitted to develop albuminuria over the first 4 weeks, subsequent heparin administration for another 4 weeks lowered U-AE from 500 μg/24 h to less than half the amount (227.8 μg/24 h). A significantly negative correlation ( P < 0.001) existed between U-AE and the number of anionic sites (AS) in the lamina rara externa of glomerular basement membranes, as visualized by electron microscopy. The number of AS per 1000 nm in STZ-injected rats (15.5 ± 0.2) was lower than that in control rats (23.1 ± 0.6); however, in heparinized animals, regardless of STZ, the values were not significantly different from normal. Heparin by itself had no effect on the number of AS in normal rats. All STZ-injected animals became hyperglycemic (400–550 mg/dl), but received no insulin. Heparin had no effect on plasma glucose levels. From these results, it is concluded that heparin suppressed both of an increase in U-AE and a decrease in AS count of glomerular basement membranes in STZ-injected rats.

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