AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined the effects of two different diets (9% casein + 70% sucrose vs. 18% casein + 61% sucrose) on diabetic nephropathy in insulin-dependent diabetic rats over three months.
  • Increased hyperlipoproteinemia and kidney hypertrophy were observed in both diet groups, with notable changes in kidney morphology indicative of diabetic nephropathy.
  • The results suggest that dietary protein content is a more critical factor influencing the progression of diabetic nephropathy than hyperlipoproteinemia.

Article Abstract

The effect of 3 months feeding with diets of different protein and sucrose content (9% casein + 70% sucrose vs. 18% casein + 61% sucrose) on the development of diabetic nephropathy and changes in serum lipid spectrum was investigated in rats with insulin-dependent diabetes (streptozotocin 45 mg.kg-1). Metabolism of diabetic animals (before the nutritional regimen) was characterized by hyperglycaemia, moderate hyperlipidemia, lipid accumulation in the liver and elevated creatinine concentration in the blood. Kidney weight and protein content were not significantly changed. Histological picture of kidneys showed initial changes of glomerular structure. After three months hyperlipoproteinaemia was more accentuated in animals given either of the two diets, the kidneys were hypertrophic with a higher protein content and displayed morphological changes of diabetic nephropathy. Animals given the low-protein diet developed smaller morphological changes both in glomeruli and tubuli. The study indicates that dietary protein and not hyperlipoproteinaemia is the major factor, which may significantly influence the progress of diabetic nephropathy.

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