General Research Model: pig

Development of a novel porcine ischemia/reperfusion model inducing different ischemia times in bilateral kidneys-effects of hydrogen gas inhalation

Simplified Version Available

How Hydrogen Gas Inhalation Helps Protect Kidneys from Injury

A new study found that hydrogen gas inhalation can help protect kidneys from injury caused by blocked blood flow. The study used pigs and found that hydrogen gas reduced oxidative stress and damaged caused by ischemia-reperfusion injury. This could lead to new treatments for kidney disease and other health problems.

Read Simplified Article

Abstract

Publish Year 2022 Country Japan Rank Positive Journal Translational Andrology and Urology Primary Topic Kidney Secondary TopicAcute Kidney Injury Model Pig Tertiary TopicIschemia-Reperfusion Injury Vehicle Gas pH N/A Application Inhalation Comparison Complement

Background

Methods: We developed a model that induces prolonged ischemia time and subsequent reperfusion injury without threatening the lives of pigs by subjecting the left and right kidneys to ischemia for 120 and 60 min, respectively. Using this novel model, we investigated whether hydrogen gas inhalation could alleviate renal IRI.

Methods

Results: All animals (n=4) survived until the end of the observation period of 3 months in this model. Evaluation of the left and right kidneys immediately before and after IRI could be performed separately by blood sampling from each renal vein and renal biopsy during surgery, although the results of peripheral blood sampling during the follow-up were the mixed results of bilateral kidneys. The release of degraded DNA from the kidneys immediately after IRI and subsequent renal fibrosis at 3 months increased in response to ischemia time. Although the effect of hydrogen gas on pathological findings was not obvious, the release of degraded DNA from the kidney, an acute marker of IRI, appeared to be suppressed. Conclusions: We have developed a novel model in which IRI of different ischemia times is induced in the bilateral kidney that provides two-fold information and allows for safe long-term observation experiments in pigs. Using this model, hydrogen gas inhalation appeared to reduce acute renal IRI, although the effect was not statistically significant. Keywords: Animal model; chronic kidney disease; hydrogen gas; ischemia reperfusion injury (IRI); porcine.