Influence of ketanserin on experimental loss of renal blood flow autoregulation

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Abstract

Serotonin is important for effective renal blood flow (RBF) autoregulation in the normal rat and at two or seven days of reperfusion following renal ischemia. It has been suggested that after these reperfusion periods and during renal perfusion pressure (RPP) lowering, the vasodilatory autoregulation mechanism is not damaged but overwhelmed by increased 5-HT2- mediated vasoconstriction, resulting in complete loss of autoregulation. This study analyzes the influence of the 5-HT2-antagonist ketanserin on RBF autoregulation after two hours or one day of renal reperfusion following ischemia and in a model of cyclosporine (20 mg/kg.day for 10 days)-induced nephrotoxicity. Autoregulation was lost both after brief reperfusion periods and after cyclosporine. Similar to the two or seven days of reperfusion experiments, ketanserin in the cyclosporine model led to reappearance of autoregulation down to RPP 95 mm Hg. Despite an increased response to intrarenal serotonin after two hours of reperfusion, autoregulation was not restored by ketanserin. At one day of reperfusion and with ketanserin, autoregulation was present down to 105 mm Hg. Thus, during the early reflow period, other factors (of decreasing importance) most likely add to autoregulation loss.

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Verbeke, M., Van de Voorde, J., De Ridder, L., & Lameire, N. (1998). Influence of ketanserin on experimental loss of renal blood flow autoregulation. In Kidney International, Supplement (Vol. 54). Nature Publishing Group. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1523-1755.1998.06760.x

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