1 results match your criteria: "Mt. Scopus and Ein Kerem and Hebrew University Medical School[Affiliation]"
Am J Nephrol
December 2008
Department of Medicine, Hadassah Hospitals, Mt. Scopus and Ein Kerem and Hebrew University Medical School, Jerusalem, Israel.
Renal parenchymal hypoxia, documented under a variety of clinical conditions, conceivably contributes to the progression chronic kidney disease. In this review, normal physiologic medullary hypoxia and abnormal profiles of renal pO(2) in chronic kidney diseases are presented, and the mechanisms leading to anomalous renal tissue oxygenation are discussed. Direct measurements of pO(2) with oxygen electrodes, immunostaining with pimonidazole (which binds to regions with very low pO(2)), or the detection of hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-alpha (which accumulates in hypoxic regions, initiating hypoxia-adaptive responses), all serve to detect the distribution and extent of renal parenchymal hypoxia under experimental settings.
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