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Nature Communications Jun 2022Hypertension is a pathological condition of persistent high blood pressure (BP) of which the underlying neural mechanisms remain obscure. Here, we show that the afferent...
Hypertension is a pathological condition of persistent high blood pressure (BP) of which the underlying neural mechanisms remain obscure. Here, we show that the afferent nerves in perirenal adipose tissue (PRAT) contribute to maintain pathological high BP, without affecting physiological BP. Bilateral PRAT ablation or denervation leads to a long-term reduction of high BP in spontaneous hypertensive rats (SHR), but has no effect on normal BP in control rats. Further, gain- and loss-of-function and neuron transcriptomics studies show that augmented activities and remodeling of L1-L2 dorsal root ganglia neurons are responsible for hypertension in SHR. Moreover, we went on to show that calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) is a key endogenous suppressor of hypertension that is sequestered by pro-hypertensive PRAT in SHRs. Taken together, we identify PRAT afferent nerves as a pro-hypertensive node that sustains high BP via suppressing CGRP, thereby providing a therapeutic target to tackle primary hypertension.
Topics: Adipose Tissue; Animals; Blood Pressure; Calcitonin Gene-Related Peptide; Ganglia, Spinal; Hypertension; Rats; Rats, Inbred SHR
PubMed: 35668093
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-30868-6 -
Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine :... Dec 2020Contrast-enhanced ultrasound has emerged as a useful imaging modality for the evaluation of the transplant kidney. Advantages over traditional imaging modalities such as... (Review)
Review
Contrast-enhanced ultrasound has emerged as a useful imaging modality for the evaluation of the transplant kidney. Advantages over traditional imaging modalities such as computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging include the ability to visualize a lesion's enhancement pattern in real time, the lack of nephrotoxicity, and relatively low cost. Potential uses of contrast-enhanced ultrasound include characterization of solid and cystic transplant renal masses, assessment for pyelonephritis and identification of its complications, and evaluation of transplant complications in immediate and delayed settings. Contrast-enhanced ultrasound will likely play an increasing role for evaluating the transplant kidney, as an accurate diagnosis based on imaging can direct treatment and prevent unnecessary interventions.
Topics: Carcinoma, Renal Cell; Contrast Media; Humans; Kidney; Kidney Neoplasms; Kidney Transplantation; Ultrasonography
PubMed: 32412688
DOI: 10.1002/jum.15339 -
Radiographics : a Review Publication of... Jun 2023Wunderlich syndrome (WS), which was named after Carl Wunderlich, is a rare clinical syndrome characterized by an acute onset of spontaneous renal hemorrhage into the... (Review)
Review
Wunderlich syndrome (WS), which was named after Carl Wunderlich, is a rare clinical syndrome characterized by an acute onset of spontaneous renal hemorrhage into the subcapsular, perirenal, and/or pararenal spaces, without a history of antecedent trauma. Patients may present with a multitude of symptoms ranging from nonspecific flank or abdominal pain to serious manifestations such as hypovolemic shock. The classic symptom complex of flank pain, a flank mass, and hypovolemic shock referred to as the Lenk triad is seen in a small subset of patients. Renal neoplasms such as angiomyolipomas and clear cell renal cell carcinomas that display an increased proclivity for hemorrhage and rupture contribute to approximately 60%-65% of all cases of WS. A plethora of renal vascular diseases (aneurysms or pseudoaneurysms, arteriovenous malformations or fistulae, renal vein thrombosis, and vasculitis syndromes) account for 20%-30% of cases of WS. Rare causes of WS include renal infections, cystic diseases, calculi, kidney failure, and coagulation disorders. Cross-sectional imaging modalities, particularly multiphasic CT or MRI, are integral to the detection, localization, and characterization of the underlying causes and facilitate optimal management. However, large-volume hemorrhage at patient presentation may obscure underlying causes, particularly neoplasms. If the initial CT or MRI examination shows no contributary causes, a dedicated CT or MRI follow-up study may be warranted to establish the cause of WS. Renal arterial embolization is a useful, minimally invasive, therapeutic option in patients who present with acute or life-threatening hemorrhage and can help avoid emergency radical surgery. Accurate diagnosis of the underlying cause of WS is critical for optimal patient treatment in emergency and nonemergency clinical settings. RSNA, 2023 Quiz questions for this article are available through the Online Learning Center.
Topics: Humans; Follow-Up Studies; Kidney Neoplasms; Kidney; Hemorrhage; Shock
PubMed: 37227946
DOI: 10.1148/rg.220172 -
Radiology Case Reports Feb 2024Perirenal hematoma is a common complication of traumatism and renal procedures such as nephrostomy, angiography, and lithotripsy. It may constitute a challenging...
Perirenal hematoma is a common complication of traumatism and renal procedures such as nephrostomy, angiography, and lithotripsy. It may constitute a challenging diagnosis in a pre-existing tumor context or in case of an atypical imaging appearance. We present a female patient followed for cervix cancer, who developed bilateral perirenal hematoma with an atypical MRI appearance evoking a malignant tumor. The diagnosis is established by the association of different imaging data (MRI with diffusion and ADC, CT scan without contrast, and CT scan after injection of contrast product). Percutaneous drainage remains the best management option for the perirenal hematoma in hemodynamic stable patients.
PubMed: 38074436
DOI: 10.1016/j.radcr.2023.09.101 -
Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging :... May 2024Owing to the increasing prevalence of diabetic mellitus, diabetic kidney disease (DKD) is presently the leading cause of chronic kidney disease and end-stage renal... (Review)
Review
Owing to the increasing prevalence of diabetic mellitus, diabetic kidney disease (DKD) is presently the leading cause of chronic kidney disease and end-stage renal disease worldwide. Early identification and disease interception is of paramount clinical importance for DKD management. However, current diagnostic, disease monitoring and prognostic tools are not satisfactory, due to their low sensitivity, low specificity, or invasiveness. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is noninvasive and offers a host of contrast mechanisms that are sensitive to pathophysiological changes and risk factors associated with DKD. MRI tissue characterization involves structural and functional information including renal morphology (kidney volume (TKV) and parenchyma thickness using T- or T-weighted MRI), renal microstructure (diffusion weighted imaging, DWI), renal tissue oxygenation (blood oxygenation level dependent MRI, BOLD), renal hemodynamics (arterial spin labeling and phase contrast MRI), fibrosis (DWI) and abdominal or perirenal fat fraction (Dixon MRI). Recent (pre)clinical studies demonstrated the feasibility and potential value of DKD evaluation with MRI. Recognizing this opportunity, this review outlines key concepts and current trends in renal MRI technology for furthering our understanding of the mechanisms underlying DKD and for supplementing clinical decision-making in DKD. Progress in preclinical MRI of DKD is surveyed, and challenges for clinical translation of renal MRI are discussed. Future directions of DKD assessment and renal tissue characterization with (multi)parametric MRI are explored. Opportunities for discovery and clinical break-through are discussed including biological validation of the MRI findings, large-scale population studies, standardization of DKD protocols, the synergistic connection with data science to advance comprehensive texture analysis, and the development of smart and automatic data analysis and data visualization tools to further the concepts of virtual biopsy and personalized DKD precision medicine. We hope that this review will convey this vision and inspire the reader to become pioneers in noninvasive assessment and management of DKD with MRI. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: 1 TECHNICAL EFFICACY: Stage 2.
Topics: Humans; Diabetic Nephropathies; Kidney; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Kidney Function Tests; Renal Insufficiency, Chronic; Diabetes Mellitus
PubMed: 37675919
DOI: 10.1002/jmri.29000 -
Abdominal Radiology (New York) Jul 2022Previous clinical studies have reported abdominal findings on ultrasonography or MRI in Puumala hantavirus-infected patients.
BACKGROUND
Previous clinical studies have reported abdominal findings on ultrasonography or MRI in Puumala hantavirus-infected patients.
PURPOSE
To determine if abdominal computed tomography (CT) can lead to a diagnosis of Puumala virus infection in the presence of a suggestive clinical picture.
MATERIAL AND METHODS
CT findings were studied retrospectively in 30 patients who presented to the emergency department of two (Belgian) hospitals with serologically confirmed Puumala hantavirus infection.
RESULTS
The most frequent finding was perirenal fascial thickening (90%), followed by perirenal fat stranding (87%). Retroperitoneal fat stranding was found in 19 patients (64%) in the perivesical spaces along the fascia of the external iliac vessels with or without involvement of the presacral fat. Half of the patients had pelvic ascites, and pleural fluid was found in 7 of them. The right and left mean pole-to-pole kidney's lengths were respectively 125.7 mm and 127.8 mm in 28 patients.
CONCLUSION
Retroperitoneal fat stranding, perirenal fascial thickening and/or perirenal fat stranding were found in most patients with acute Puumala virus infection who have undergone CT. Although nonspecific, these findings may help to suggest Puumala hantavirus infection in the right clinical settings.
Topics: Hantavirus Infections; Hemorrhagic Fever with Renal Syndrome; Humans; Puumala virus; Retrospective Studies; Tomography, X-Ray Computed
PubMed: 35441863
DOI: 10.1007/s00261-022-03467-8 -
International Journal of Clinical and... 2014IgG4-related disease is a recently established systemic condition. Tubulointerstitial nephritis is the most common renal manifestation. Glomerular lesions, particularly... (Review)
Review
IgG4-related disease is a recently established systemic condition. Tubulointerstitial nephritis is the most common renal manifestation. Glomerular lesions, particularly membranous glomerulonephritis, can develop simultaneously. Some patients present with serological renal dysfunction associated with elevated IgG or IgE levels and hypocomplementemia, while others are incidentally found to have abnormalities in kidneys on imaging. A majority of patients with IgG4-related kidney disease have similar lesions at other anatomical sites, which help us to suspect this condition. Serum IgG4 elevation (>135 mg/dL) is the most, although not entirely, specific marker for the diagnosis. Imaging findings varies from small nodules to bilateral diffuse abnormalities. In addition to the renal parenchyma, the renal pelvis and perirenal adipose tissue can be affected. Histological features include dense lymphoplasmacytic infiltration, storiform or "bird's eye" fibrosis (highlighted by PAM stain), and IgG4-positive plasma cell infiltration (>10 cells/high-power field and IgG4/IgG-positive cell ratio >40%). Immune complex deposition is detectable in the tubular basement membrane by immunofluorescence and/or electron microscopy. Patients usually respond well to corticosteroids, but highly active diseases may require other immunosuppressive therapies. Further investigations will be required to fully understand pathophysiology underlying this emerging condition.
Topics: Autoimmune Diseases; Biomarkers; Biopsy; Glomerulonephritis, Membranous; Humans; Immunoglobulin G; Immunohistochemistry; Immunosuppressive Agents; Kidney; Nephritis, Interstitial; Predictive Value of Tests; Treatment Outcome
PubMed: 25337295
DOI: No ID Found -
International Journal of Colorectal... Nov 2021Rates of obesity are increasing worldwide, as is the incidence of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Obesity is now considered an inflammatory state. Visceral adiposity... (Review)
Review
BACKGROUND
Rates of obesity are increasing worldwide, as is the incidence of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Obesity is now considered an inflammatory state. Visceral adiposity in particular may be associated with a more severe inflammatory phenotype in IBD.
AIM
The aim of this review article is to summarise the current literature on the association between visceral adiposity and outcomes in inflammatory bowel disease METHODS: To collect relevant articles, PubMed/MEDLINE and Embase searches were performed using Boolean search phrases. Grey literature and manual searches were also performed. Abstracts were selected by two independent reviewers based on pre-determined criteria. Full text articles were reviewed, and data extracted and assessed.
RESULTS
One hundred twenty-seven abstracts were obtained through the initial search, with 85 abstracts reviewed and 22 full text articles included. Characteristics are included in Table 1. Most of these were retrospective studies and of moderate or weak quality. Studies suggested visceral fat content is higher in Crohn's disease than in healthy controls. Visceral adiposity was associated with an increased risk of complex Crohn's disease phenotype (OR 26.1 95% CI 2-75.4; p = 0.02). Post-operative recurrence was higher in patients with higher visceral fat indices (RR 2.1; CI 1.5-3; p = 0.012). There were conflicting data regarding the effect of visceral adiposity on post-operative complications and the efficacy of medical therapy. Table 1 Study characteristics Author Year Country Study type Study numbers Control group Disease type Methodology e.g. CT Body composition measurements Results Argeny [24] 2018 Austria Retrospective cohort N = 95 N/A Crohn's disease CT; L3 level Visceral fat area (cm) Visceral fat index (VFA/m) No association between VFA or VFI and short-term post-operative outcomes Bryant [30] 2018 Australia Prospective cohort N = 110 N/A Crohn's disease and UC DXA Visceral adipose tissue (VAT) (cm) Visceral adipose tissue (grams) VAT/height index (cm/m) VAT:subcutaneous adipose tissue ratio Fat mass index (kg/m) VAT and VHI increased significantly over 24 months Bryant [13] 2018 Australia Prospective cohort N = 72 N/A Crohn's disease; female DXA Visceral adipose tissue (VAT) (cm) Visceral adipose tissue (grams) VAT/height index (cm/m) VAT:subcutaneous adipose tissue ratio VAT:SAT positively associated with stricturing disease Adiposity not associated with fistulising disease phenotype VAT:SAT significantly associated with faecal calprotectin in L3 phenotype VAT:SAT significantly negatively associated with VHI and QoL over 24 months Buning [25] 2015 Germany Case control N = 50 N = 19 healthy controls Crohn's disease MRI US VAT Thickness of abdominal fat Distance to posterior wall of aorta Area of inferior part of perirenal fat VAT accumulation was higher in CD patients vs healthy controls VAT and VAT/fat mass ratio higher in patients in short-term remission vs long-term remission VAT/FM higher in stricturing/fistulising disease vs inflammatory subtype No association between VAT/FM and CDAI, HBI or anti-TNF treatment Connolly [26] 2014 US Retrospective cohort N = 143 N/A Crohn's disease CT (L1-L5 level) Visceral/intra-abdominal adiposity (VA) Subcutaneous adiposity (SA) VA not associated with post-operative morbidity Decreased SA and increased visceral/subcutaneous ratio were predictive of post-op complications. (p = 0.02; p < 0.001) Cravo [27] 2017 Portugal Retrospective cohort N = 71 N/A Crohn's disease CT (L3 level) Smooth muscle area (cm) Visceral fat area (cm) Subcutaneous fat area (cm) Visceral fat index Muscle radiation attenuation L2 phenotype associated with lower muscle attenuation and higher visceral fat index (non-significant) B2/B3/surgery - significantly lower muscle attenuation. VFI associated with increased risk of complicated phenotype. (OR 26.1; 95% CI 1-75; p = 0.02) Ding [17] 2016 US Retrospective cohort N = 164 N/A Crohn's disease CT (L3 level) Visceral fat area (cm) Subcutaneous fat area Total fat area Visceral obesity associated with longer duration of surgery, increased intra-operative blood loss and longer length of bowel resected Higher complication rates in patients with visceral obesity (p < 0.001) VFA independent risk factor of adverse post-op outcomes Ding [14] 2017 Retrospective cohort N = 106 N/A Crohn's disease CT (L3 level) Visceral fat area Subcutaneous fat area Skeletal muscle area Skeletal muscle index Visceral obesity and myopenic obesity not significantly associated with risk of primary non-response Body composition factors not associated with secondary loss of response Erhayiem [18] 2011 UK Retrospective cohort N = 50 N/A Crohn's disease CT (L4 level) Mesenteric fat index (visceral:subcutaneous area ratio)N = 50 Mesenteric fat index was significantly higher in complicated Crohn's disease. ROC analysis for MFI in identifying complicated Crohn's disease: AUC = 0.95 (95% CI 0.89-1.0) Feng [28] 2018 China Retrospective cohort N = 80 Non-IBD GI patients Crohn's disease CT-energy spectral Visceral fat area (cm) Subcutaneous fat area (cm) Mesenteric fat index No significant difference in VFA between Crohn's disease cohort and control group. (p = 0.669). ROC analysis: detection of disease based on VFA and MFI: AUC 0.776 Sensitivity 77.5% Specificity 67.5% Hafraoui [16] 1998 France/Belgium Prospective N = 43 Healthy volunteers n = 13 Intestinal resection n = 9 Crohn's disease MRI (umbilicus) Total abdominal fat (cm) Intra-abdominal fat (cm) Subcutaneous fat (cm) Ratio of intra-abdominal:total fat area was significantly higher in patients with Crohn's vs controls. (p = 0.012) No correlation between abdominal fat tissue and disease activity, duration or steroid therapy Holt [29] 2017 Australia/New Zealand RCT N = 44 N = 11 placebo group Crohn's disease CT/MRI (L3, L4-5 levels) Visceral adipose tissue area Subcutaneous adipose tissue area Skeletal muscle area Visceral adipose tissue/height index VHI > 1.5 times gender mean was specific for endoscopic recurrence (100%) with sensitivity of 29%. PPV = 1 (0.59-1.00) There was no significant difference in disease activity at 18 months post-resection based on VHI > 1.5 gender mean Li [31] 2015 China Retrospective cohort N = 72 N/A Crohn's disease CT (umbilicus) Visceral fat area (cm) Subcutaneous fat area (cm) Mesenteric fat index Post-op recurrence was more frequent with high VFA values. (p = 0.019) VFA and MFI were independent risk factors for post-operative recurrence. (p = 0.013 and p = 0.028, respectively) High VFA and high MFI were significantly higher in patients with endoscopic activity (p = 0.023) Liu [32] 2016 Retrospective case-control N = 59 N = 30 (< 15% increase VFA) IBD with IPAA CT (L3) Visceral fat area Subcutaneous fat area No difference in pouchitis, pouch sinus formation and composite adverse pouch outcomes between the 2 groups with and without VFA increase > 15%. Excessive VAT gain was an independent risk factor for the composite adverse pouch outcomes. (OR 12.6 (95% CI 1.19-133.5) Magro [33] 2018 Brazil Cross-sectional study N = 78 N = 28 Health control Crohn's disease DEXA Fat and lean masses Visceral fat (kg) Visceral fat/BMI Visceral fat per %body fat VF was higher in Crohn's disease group (p = 0.004) compared to controls Parmentier-Decrucq [34] 2009 Prospective study N = 132 N/A Crohn's disease MRI Subcutaneous fat Visceral fat Total abdominal fat increased 18% in Crohn's disease patients treated with infliximab induction therapy Shen [35] 2018 China Retrospective N = 97 N/A Crohn's disease CT (umbilicus) Subcutaneous fat area Visceral fat area Mesenteric fat index VFA and MFI were significantly lower in patients with mucosal healing (post-infliximab). (p < 0.0001) SFA was not significantly different VFA correlated with CDAI (p < 0.001) and was an independent predictive factor for mucosal healing Stidham [15] 2015 Retrospective N = 269 N/A Crohn's disease CT(T10-L5) Subcutaneous fat volume Visceral fat volume No significant difference in visceral fat volume between patients with surgical complications Thiberge [36] 2018 France Retrospective N = 149 N/A Crohn's disease CT (L3 level) Skeletal muscle index Visceral adiposity index Subcutaneous adiposity index SAI and VAI were significantly lower in patients who underwent surgery or who died in 6 months post-CT(p = 0.009 and p < 0.001) VanDerSloot [37] 2017 Cohort study N/A Crohn's disease CT (T11-S5) Visceral adipose tissue volume Non-significant trend toward increased risk of surgery and penetrating disease with increasing VAT Wei [38] 2018 China Retrospective N = 86 N/A IBD post-resection CT (L3 level) Visceral adipose volume Subcutaneous adipose volume Increased visceral:subcutaneous fat ratio was associated with increased procalcitonin levels on post-op days 1, 3 and 5 Yadav [39] 2017 India Prospective N = 97 N/A IBD CT (L4 level) Visceral fat area Subcutaneous fat area No statistically significant correlation between visceral fat and disease behaviour in Crohn's disease N/A not applicable, VFA visceral fat area, VFI visceral fat index, VAT visceral adipose tissue, VHI visceral adipose tissue to height index, SAT subcutaneous adipose tissue, DXA dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, CT computer tomography, MRI magnetic resonance imaging, US ultrasound, CDAI Crohn's disease activity index, HBI Harvey-Bradshaw Index, anti-TNF anti-tumour necrosis factor, SA subcutaneous adiposity, ROC receiver operating curve, AUC area under the curve, MFI mesenteric fat index, SAI subcutaneous adiposity index, PPV positive predictive value CONCLUSION: Visceral adiposity appears to be increased in Crohn's disease with some evidence that it is also associated with more complex disease phenotypes. There is also a signal that post-operative recurrence rates are affected by increasing mesenteric adiposity. There is a relative lack of data in UC patients and further high-quality studies are necessary to elucidate the relationship between visceral adiposity and IBD and the implications for patient outcomes.
Topics: Adiposity; Body Mass Index; Cohort Studies; Crohn Disease; Cross-Sectional Studies; Female; Humans; Intra-Abdominal Fat; Obesity, Abdominal; Prospective Studies; Quality of Life; Retrospective Studies; Tumor Necrosis Factor Inhibitors
PubMed: 34104989
DOI: 10.1007/s00384-021-03968-w -
Journal of Clinical Medicine Oct 2021Perirenal adipose tissue, one of the fat masses surrounding the kidneys, can be obtained from healthy donors during a kidney transplant. Perirenal adipose tissue has... (Review)
Review
Perirenal adipose tissue, one of the fat masses surrounding the kidneys, can be obtained from healthy donors during a kidney transplant. Perirenal adipose tissue has only ever been known as a connective tissue to protect the kidneys and renal blood vessels from external physical stimulation. Yet, recently, as adipose tissue has begun to be considered an endocrine organ, and perirenal adipose tissue is now regarded to have a direct effect on metabolic diseases. The characteristics of perirenal adipose tissue from a healthy donor are that: (1) There are a large number of brown adipose cells (70-80% of the total), (2) Most of the brown adipose cells are inactive in the resting cell cycle, (3) Activating factors are constant low-temperature exposure, hormones, metastasis factors, and environmental factors, (4) Anatomically, a large number of brown adipose cells are distributed close to the adrenal glands, (5) Beige cells, produced by converting white adipocytes to brown-like adipocytes, are highly active, (6) Activated cells secrete BATokines, and (7) Energy consumption efficiency is high. Despite these advantages, all of the perirenal adipose tissue from a healthy donor is incinerated as medical waste. With a view to its use, this review discusses the brown adipocytes and beige cells in perirenal adipose tissue from a healthy donor, and proposes opportunities for their clinical application.
PubMed: 34768543
DOI: 10.3390/jcm10215024 -
Cureus Apr 2022Wünderlich syndrome (WS) is a spontaneous retroperitoneal hemorrhage confined to the subcapsular or perinephric space without a history of trauma. Since it is a rare...
Wünderlich syndrome (WS) is a spontaneous retroperitoneal hemorrhage confined to the subcapsular or perinephric space without a history of trauma. Since it is a rare condition with a significant mortality rate if not treated timely, it is essential to identify its risk factors and early clinical manifestations for a favorable outcome. Various conditions are associated, but the most common causes are benign and malignant renal neoplasms. We present a 26-year-old female with a history of tonic-clonic seizures who presented to the ED with intense abdominal pain located on the right flank with a palpable mass. Management included IV fluids and blood transfusion. She underwent a right total nephrectomy. She was later diagnosed with tuberous sclerosis. A 44-year-old female with a three-year history of right costovertebral pain and recurrent urinary tract infections that presented to the ED with acute right flank pain was diagnosed with WS secondary to an angiomyolipoma and underwent right total nephrectomy.WS is a very rare pathology that represents a diagnostic challenge for the physician. The treatment will depend on the hemodynamic condition of the patient. Active follow-up should be reserved for those who have small tumors, are asymptomatic, and have hemodynamic stability. Surgical or radiology intervention is reserved for those who are hemodynamically unstable or who have a suspicion of renal cell carcinoma.
PubMed: 35530872
DOI: 10.7759/cureus.23861