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Renal function during normal pregnancy and preeclampsia. | LitMetric

Renal function during normal pregnancy and preeclampsia.

Front Biosci

Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and Magee-Womens Research Institute, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA.

Published: January 2007

Glomerular filtration rate and renal plasma flow increase by 40 to 65 and 50 to 85%, respectively, during normal pregnancy in women. Studies using the gravid rat as a model have greatly enhanced our understanding of mechanisms underlying these remarkable changes in the renal circulation during gestation. Hyperfiltration is largely due to increased renal plasma flow, the latter attributable to profound reductions in both the renal afferent and efferent arteriolar resistances. The ovarian hormone, relaxin, mediates renal vasodilation during pregnancy. Relaxin increases vascular gelatinase activity, thereby converting big ET to ET(1-32), which leads to renal vasodilation, hyperfiltration and reduced myogenic reactivity of small renal arteries via the endothelial ET(B) receptor and nitric oxide. Serum concentration of uric acid falls during normal pregnancy as a consequence of increased GFR and/or reduced proximal tubular reabsorption. The elevated urinary excretion of protein during pregnancy is secondary to increased GFR, reduced proximal tubular reabsorption, and perhaps alteration in the electrostatic charge of the glomerular filter. Whether the tubular secretion of Tamm-Horsfall protein increases during normal pregnancy is uncertain. In most women with preeclampsia, renal plasma flow and glomerular filtration rate are at most only modestly decreased as a consequence of increased afferent arteriolar resistance and/or reduced ultrafiltration coefficient. Serum uric acid concentrations are increased mainly as a consequence of reduced renal clearance. Reduced GFR leads to decreased filtered load of uric acid, and plasma volume contraction contributes to increased proximal tubular reabsorption coupled to sodium. The increase in urinary protein excretion in preeclampsia occurs secondary to alterations in the size and/or charge selectivity of the glomerular filter, possible increases in glomerular capillary pressure, and compromise of proximal tubular reabsorption. The renal histologic lesion characteristic of preeclampsia is termed "glomerular endotheliosis". Recent evidence suggests that anti-angiogenic factors emanating from the placenta in preeclampsia contribute to glomerular endotheliosis, proteinuria, and hypertension during disease.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.2741/2244DOI Listing

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