Urinary prostaglandin E and kallikrein activity in glomerular hyperfiltration induced by a meat meal in man

J. Herrera, B. Rodriguez-Iturbe, G. Parra, J. Coello, R. Garcia, J. Colina-Chourio, A. Sinaiko

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7 Scopus citations

Abstract

Because renal vasodilator systems may be involved in the physiologic response to a protein meal, we studied the relationship of prostaglandin E (PGE) and kallikrein (KE) activity to the renal hemodynamic changes induced by a meat meal. Ten normal subjects on a maintenance diet providing 1 g protein per kg and 100 mmol Na daily were studied before and after a meal of 86 g of meat protein, once without medication, and again after treatment with indomethacin (150 mg daily for 3 days before and 50 mg the morning of the test). A carbohydrate meal of similar caloric, Na and K content was used in control studies. Glomerular filtration rate (GFR, inulin clearance), renal blood flow (RBF, para-aminohippurate [PAH] clearance), PGE and kallikrein urinary excretion were determined. All studies were performed during water diuresis to avoid bladder catheterization. The protein load induced an increase in GFR (ml/min, mean ± s.e.m.: baseline 107.2 ± 6.05, peak postmeal 146.4 ± 6.79, p < 0.01) and RBF (baseline 529.7 ± 42.9, postmeal 678.9 ± 61.9, p < 0.05). Renal hemodynamic changes were unrelated to changes in urinaryy PGE and KE excretion. Indomethacin treatment inhibited PGE excretion by 73% during the test meal but did not modify the protein-induced hyperfiltration. Our results suggest that these renal vasodilator systems are not primary responsible for the hyperfiltration response. In addition, the data show that inhibition of prostaglandin synthesis is not a practical approach to prevent glomerular hyperfiltration in clinical practice.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)151-157
Number of pages7
JournalClinical Nephrology
Volume30
Issue number3
StatePublished - Jan 1 1988

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