Can paricalcitol increase the effectiveness of N-acetylcysteine in contrast induced acute kidney prophylaxis in rats? A biochemical and histopathological study
View/ Open
Access
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessDate
2022Author
Yıldırım, YaşarBahadır, Veysi
Aydın, Emre
Aydın, Fatma Yılmaz
Yılmaz, Zülfükar
Ketani, Aydın
Kaplan, İbrahim
Tuncer, Mehmet Cudi
Kadiroǧlu, Ali Kemal
Yılmaz, Mehmet Emin
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Yıldırım, Y., Bahadir, V., Aydın, E., Aydın, F. Y., Yılmaz, Z., Ketani, A. ve diğerleri. (2022). Can paricalcitol increase the effectiveness of N-acetylcysteine in contrast induced acute kidney prophylaxis in rats? A biochemical and histopathological study. International Journal of Morphology, 40(4), 1060-1066.Abstract
N-Acetylcysteine (NAC) is used for contrast induced acut kidney injury (CI-AKI) prophylaxis because of its antioxidant effects. Paricalcitol, which has reno-protective effects, is likely to provide a more effective prophylaxis when added to NAC treatment. The study was designed based on this hypothesis. The study was organised to include 4 groups each consisting of 7 rats. Group 1 was the control group, and Group 2 included rats with CI-AKI. Rats in Group 3 were administered NAC at a dose of 100 mg/kg via oral gavage once a day for 5 days. Rats in group 4 were administered paricalcitol at a dose of 0.4 mcg/kg once a day for 5 days in addition to NAC. CI-AKI was induced after the treatments in both groups. The study was terminated on the sixth day. Samples were collected from the rats’ sera and kidney tissues to study oxidant and antioxidant parameters; kidney function tests were also studied. There were significant differences between the contrast nephropathy group (Group 2) and NAC and NAC+paricalcitol groups with respect to serum urea and creatinine levels. When the same groups were compared regarding oxidant (TOS-MDA) and antioxidant (TAC-Paraoxonase) parameters, we observed that the oxidant parameters increased in serum and kidney tissue samples with NAC use, and that effect was strengthened by the addition of paricalcitol to NAC treatment. However, despite increased antioxidant effectiveness, we observed no decrease in urea and creatinine levels when paricalcitol was added for CI-AKI in rats. There was no significant difference between Group 3 and Group 4. Paricalcitol provides a more potent antioxidant effect in both serum and kidney tissue samples when added to NAC treatment in rats with CI-AKI. Despite increased antioxidant parameters, however, paricalcitol does not provide a significant decrease in urea and creatinine levels.
Scopus Q Category
Q3Volume
40Issue
4URI
https://www.scielo.cl/pdf/ijmorphol/v40n4/0717-9502-ijmorphol-40-04-1060.pdfhttps://hdl.handle.net/11468/13642