ACUTE-RENAL-FAILURE - I - RELATIVE IMPORTANCE OF PROXIMAL VS. DISTAL TUBULAR INJURY

Citation
Jv. Bonventre et al., ACUTE-RENAL-FAILURE - I - RELATIVE IMPORTANCE OF PROXIMAL VS. DISTAL TUBULAR INJURY, American journal of physiology. Renal, fluid and electrolyte physiology, 44(5), 1998, pp. 623-631
Citations number
67
Categorie Soggetti
Physiology
ISSN journal
03636127
Volume
44
Issue
5
Year of publication
1998
Pages
623 - 631
Database
ISI
SICI code
0363-6127(1998)44:5<623:A-I-RI>2.0.ZU;2-V
Abstract
For more than 15 years, there has been an ongoing debate regarding the nephron segment(s) most severely injured in acute renal failure (ARF) induced by an ischemic or toxic insult. Although some investigators h ave argued that the proximal tubule (and particularly the S3 segment) is the major target of injury in ARF, others have held the view that d amage to the distal nephron [particularly the medullary thick ascendin g limb (MTAL) segment] plays a more important role in this disease. In this discussion, the first of three on different aspects of ARF that have been hotly debated, we have invited several experts to discuss th eir opinions on this issue. The goals of this first discussion (and th e subsequent two articles in this forum) are to establish areas of con sensus in each area of controversy and also to identify unanswered que stions that represent important areas for future research.