Multi-modality optical imaging of rat kidney dysfunction: In vivo response to various ischemia times

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Abstract

We observed in vivo kidney dysfunction with various ischemia times at 30, 75, 90, and 120 min using multi-modality optical imaging: optical coherence tomography (OCT), Doppler OCT (DOCT), and two-photon microscopy (TPM). We imaged the renal tubule lumens and glomerulus at several areas of each kidney before, during, and after ischemia of 5-month-old female Munich-Wistar rats. For animals with 30 and 75 min ischemia times, we observed that all areas were recovered after ischemia, that tubule lumens were re-opened and the blood flow of the glomerulus was re-established. For animals with 90 and 120 min ischemia times, we observed unrecovered areas, and that tubule lumens remained close after ischemia. TPM imaging verified the results of OCT and provided higher resolution images than OCT to visualize renal tubule lumens and glomerulus blood flow at the cellular level.

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Ding, Z., Jin, L., Wang, H. W., Tang, Q., Guo, H., & Chen, Y. (2016). Multi-modality optical imaging of rat kidney dysfunction: In vivo response to various ischemia times. In Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology (Vol. 923, pp. 345–350). Springer New York LLC. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-38810-6_45

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