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Dive into the research topics where Anil K. Bidani is active.

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Featured researches published by Anil K. Bidani.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2010

Acute kidney injury: a springboard for progression in chronic kidney disease

Manjeri A. Venkatachalam; Karen A. Griffin; Rongpei Lan; Hui Geng; Pothana Saikumar; Anil K. Bidani

Recently published epidemiological and outcome analysis studies have brought to our attention the important role played by acute kidney injury (AKI) in the progression of chronic kidney disease (CKD) to end-stage renal disease (ESRD). AKI accelerates progression in patients with CKD; conversely, CKD predisposes patients to AKI. This research gives credence to older, well-thought-out wisdom that recovery from AKI is often not complete and is marked by residual structural damage. It also mirrors older experimental observations showing that unilateral nephrectomy, a surrogate for loss of nephrons by disease, compromises structural recovery and worsens tubulointerstitial fibrosis after ischemic AKI. Moreover, review of a substantial body of work on the relationships among reduced renal mass, hypertension, and pathology associated with these conditions suggests that impaired myogenic autoregulation of blood flow in the setting of hypertension, the arteriolosclerosis that results, and associated recurrent ischemic AKI in microscopic foci play important roles in the development of progressively increasing tubulointerstitial fibrosis. How nutrition, an additional factor that profoundly affects renal disease progression, influences these events needs reevaluation in light of information on the effects of calories vs. protein and animal vs. vegetable protein on injury and progression. Considerations based on published and emerging data suggest that a pathology that develops in regenerating tubules after AKI characterized by failure of differentiation and persistently high signaling activity is the proximate cause that drives downstream events in the interstitium: inflammation, capillary rarefaction, and fibroblast proliferation. In light of this information, we advance a comprehensive hypothesis regarding the pathophysiology of AKI as it relates to the progression of kidney disease. We discuss the implications of this pathophysiology for developing efficient therapeutic strategies to delay progression and avert ESRD.


Hypertension | 2004

Pathophysiology of Hypertensive Renal Damage. Implications for Therapy

Anil K. Bidani; Karen A. Griffin

Unlike the majority of patients with uncomplicated hypertension in whom minimal renal damage develops in the absence of severe blood pressure (BP) elevations, patients with diabetic and nondiabetic chronic kidney disease (CKD) exhibit an increased vulnerability to even moderate BP elevations. Investigations in experimental animal models have revealed that this enhanced susceptibility is a consequence of an impairment of the renal autoregulatory mechanisms that normally attenuate the transmission of elevated systemic pressures to the glomeruli in uncomplicated hypertension. The markedly lower BP threshold for renal damage and the steeper slope of relationship between BP and renal damage in such states necessitates that BP be lowered into the normotensive range to prevent progressive renal damage. When BP is accurately measured using radiotelemetry in animal models, the renal protection provided by renin-angiotensin system (RAS) blockade is proportional to the BP reduction with little evidence of BP-independent protection. A critical evaluation of the clinical data also suggests that the BP-independent renoprotection by RAS blockade has been overemphasized and that achieving lower BP targets is more important than the selection of antihypertensive regimens. However, achievement of such BP goals is difficult in CKD patients without aggressive diuresis, because of their proclivity for salt retention. The effectiveness of RAS blockers in lowering BP in patients who have been adequately treated with diuretics, along with their potassium-sparing and magnesium-sparing effects, provides a more compelling rationale for the use of RAS blockade in the treatment of CKD patients than any putative BP-independent renoprotective superiority.


Circulation Research | 2002

Renal Myogenic Response: Kinetic Attributes and Physiological Role

Rodger Loutzenhiser; Anil K. Bidani; Lisa Chilton

The kinetic attributes of the afferent arteriole myogenic response were investigated using the in vitro perfused hydronephrotic rat kidney. Equations describing the time course for pressure-dependent vasoconstriction and vasodilation, and steady-state changes in diameter were combined to develop a mathematical model of autoregulation. Transfer functions were constructed by passing sinusoidal pressure waves through the model. These findings were compared with results derived using data from instrumented conscious rats. In each case, a reduction in gain and increase in phase were observed at frequencies of 0.2 to 0.3 Hz. We then examined the impact of oscillating pressure signals. The model predicted that pressure signals oscillating at frequencies above the myogenic operating range would elicit a sustained vasoconstriction the magnitude of which was dependent on peak pressure. These predictions were directly confirmed in the hydronephrotic kidney. Pressure oscillations presented at frequencies of 1 to 6 Hz elicited sustained afferent vasoconstrictions and the magnitude of the response depended exclusively on the peak pressure. Elevated systolic pressure elicited vasoconstriction even if mean pressure was reduced. These findings challenge the view that the renal myogenic response exists to maintain glomerular capillary pressure constant, but rather imply a primary role in protecting against elevated systolic pressures. Thus, the kinetic features of the afferent arteriole allow this vessel to adjust tone in response to changes in systolic pressures presented at the pulse rate. We suggest that the primary function of this mechanism is to protect the glomerulus from the blood pressure power that is normally present at the pulse frequency.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2008

Adverse renal consequences of obesity

Karen A. Griffin; Holly Kramer; Anil K. Bidani

Emerging evidence indicates that obesity, even in the absence of diabetes, contributes significantly to the development and progression of chronic kidney disease (CKD). Glomerular hyperfiltration/hypertrophy in response to the increased metabolic needs of obesity are postulated to lead to the development of glomerulosclerosis (GS) in a manner analogous to that in reduced renal mass states. Nevertheless, the individual risk for developing GS with obesity is very low. It is proposed that glomerular hyperfiltration/hypertrophy are per se not pathogenic in the absence of an enhanced glomerular blood pressure (BP) transmission, and the modest preglomerular vasodilation that is likely present in the large majority of obese individuals is not sufficient to result in such increased BP transmission. However, in the small subset of obese individuals who are also born with a substantially reduced nephron number, there is a greater risk of enhanced glomerular BP transmission due to the substantially greater preglomerular vasodilation. Of perhaps greater clinical importance, similar additive deleterious effects of obesity on BP transmission would be expected in individuals with reduced renal mass, either congenital or acquired, or with concurrent renal disease, leading to accelerated progression. Of note, a low birth weight may be a risk factor for not only reduced nephron numbers at birth, but also for obesity and hypertension, resulting in a clustering of risk factors for progressive GS. Therefore, even though the individual risk for developing obesity GS is low, the cumulative impact of obesity on the public health burden of CKD is likely to be large because of its huge prevalence.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1995

Deleterious effects of calcium channel blockade on pressure transmission and glomerular injury in rat remnant kidneys.

Karen A. Griffin; Maria M. Picken; Anil K. Bidani

Hypertensive mechanisms are postulated to play a major role in the progressive glomerulosclerosis (GS) after renal mass reduction. But, in contrast to converting enzyme inhibitors, BP reduction by calcium channel blockers, has not provided consistent protection. Radiotelemetric BP monitoring for 7 wk was used to compare nifedipine (N) and enalapril (E) in the rat approximately 5/6 renal ablation model. After the first week, rats received N, E, or no treatment (C). The overall averaged systolic BP in C (173 +/- 7 mmHg) was reduced by both E and N (P < 0.001), but E was more effective (113 +/- 2 vs. 134 +/- 3 mmHg, P < 0.01). GS was prevented by E (2 +/- 1 vs. 26 +/- 5% in C) but not by N (25 +/- 6%). GS correlated well with the overall averaged BP in individual animals of all groups, but the slope of the relationship was significantly steeper in N compared with C+E rats (P < 0.02), suggesting greater pressure transmission to the glomeruli and GS for any given BP. Since autoregulatory mechanisms provide the primary protection against pressure transmission, renal autoregulation was examined at 3 wk in additional rats. Autoregulation was impaired in C rats, was not additionally altered by E, but was completely abolished by N. These data demonstrate the importance of autoregulatory mechanisms in the pathogenesis of hypertensive injury and suggest that calcium channel blockers which adversely affect pressure transmission may not provide protection despite significant BP reduction.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2015

Failed Tubule Recovery, AKI-CKD Transition, and Kidney Disease Progression

Manjeri A. Venkatachalam; Joel M. Weinberg; Wilhelm Kriz; Anil K. Bidani

The transition of AKI to CKD has major clinical significance. As reviewed here, recent studies show that a subpopulation of dedifferentiated, proliferating tubules recovering from AKI undergo pathologic growth arrest, fail to redifferentiate, and become atrophic. These abnormal tubules exhibit persistent, unregulated, and progressively increasing profibrotic signaling along multiple pathways. Paracrine products derived therefrom perturb normal interactions between peritubular capillary endothelium and pericyte-like fibroblasts, leading to myofibroblast transformation, proliferation, and fibrosis as well as capillary disintegration and rarefaction. Although signals from injured endothelium and inflammatory/immune cells also contribute, tubule injury alone is sufficient to produce the interstitial pathology required for fibrosis. Localized hypoxia produced by microvascular pathology may also prevent tubule recovery. However, fibrosis is not intrinsically progressive, and microvascular pathology develops strictly around damaged tubules; thus, additional deterioration of kidney structure after the transition of AKI to CKD requires new acute injury or other mechanisms of progression. Indeed, experiments using an acute-on-chronic injury model suggest that additional loss of parenchyma caused by failed repair of AKI in kidneys with prior renal mass reduction triggers hemodynamically mediated processes that damage glomeruli to cause progression. Continued investigation of these pathologic mechanisms should reveal options for preventing renal disease progression after AKI.


Hypertension | 2003

Renoprotection by ACE Inhibition or Aldosterone Blockade Is Blood Pressure-Dependent

Karen A. Griffin; Isam Abu-Amarah; Maria M. Picken; Anil K. Bidani

Abstract—Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system blockade has been shown to protect against renal damage in salt-supplemented, stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRsp). Based on intermittent tail-cuff blood pressure (BP) measurements, it has been claimed that such protection is BP-independent and mediated by a blockade of the direct tissue-damaging effects of angiotensin and/or aldosterone. BP radiotelemetry was performed for 8 weeks in ≈10-week-old male SHRsp who received a standard diet and either tap water (n=10) or 1% NaCl to drink. Saline-drinking SHRsp were either left untreated (n=12), received enalapril (50 mg/L) in drinking fluid (n=9), or had subcutaneous implantation of time-release 200-mg pellets of aldactone (n=10). The average systolic BP (mean±SEM) during the final 3 weeks was significantly higher (P <0.05) in untreated saline-drinking (215±6 mm Hg) SHRsp but not aldactone-treated (198±4 mm Hg) or enalapril-treated treated SHRsp (173±1 mm Hg), as compared with tap water–drinking SHRsp (197±3 mm Hg). Histological renal damage scores at 8 weeks paralleled the BP in all groups, with an excellent correlation (r =0.8, P <0.001, n=41). Moreover, a renal damage score of >5 was only observed in SHRsp whose average systolic BP during the final 3 weeks exceeded 200 mm Hg, indicating a threshold relation with BP. These data show that protection by renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system blockade in this model is BP-dependent and mediated by preventing the severe increases in BP seen in untreated salt-supplemented SHRsp and further underscore the limitations of interpretations based on conventional tail-cuff BP measurements.


Hypertension | 2009

Protective Importance of the Myogenic Response in the Renal Circulation

Anil K. Bidani; Karen A. Griffin; Geoffrey A. Williamson; Xuemei Wang; Rodger Loutzenhiser

Primary essential hypertension is second only to diabetic nephropathy as a etiology for end-stage renal disease.1 In addition, coexistent/superimposed hypertension plays a major role in the progression of most forms of chronic kidney disease (CKD), including diabetic nephropathy.2–5 Nevertheless, the individual risk is very low, with <1% of the hypertensive population developing end-stage renal disease. Such data indicate that there must be mechanisms that normally protect the kidneys from hypertensive injury of a severity sufficient to result in end-stage renal disease. The following Brief Review summarizes the evidence that indicates that the renal autoregulatory response, primarily mediated by the myogenic mechanism, is largely responsible for such protection. Moreover, the differing patterns of renal damage that are observed in clinical and experimental hypertension are best explained when considered in the context of alterations in the renal autoregulatory capacity. Recent data also indicate that hypertensive renal damage correlates most strongly with systolic blood pressure (BP).6–8 Accordingly, the review further emphasizes the kinetic characteristics of the renal myogenic response to oscillating BP signals that render it particularly capable of providing protection against systolic pressures. Most individuals with primary hypertension develop the modest vascular pathology of benign nephrosclerosis.5 The glomeruli are largely spared, and, therefore, proteinuria is not a prominent feature. Because it progresses fairly slowly with limited ischemic nephron loss, renal function is not seriously compromised, except in some genetically susceptible individuals or groups, such as blacks, in whom a more accelerated course may be seen.2–5 Thus, the slope of the relationship between renal damage and BP through most of the hypertensive range is fairly flat in individuals with benign nephrosclerosis.2–4 However, if the hypertension becomes very severe and exceeds a critical threshold, severe acute disruptive injury of malignant nephrosclerosis to the renal arteries and arterioles develops …


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1997

Genetic susceptibility to hypertension-induced renal damage in the rat. Evidence based on kidney-specific genome transfer.

Paul C. Churchill; Monique C. Churchill; Anil K. Bidani; Karen A. Griffin; Maria M. Picken; Michal Pravenec; Vladimir Kren; E. St. Lezin; Jiaming Wang; Ning Wang; T W Kurtz

To test the hypothesis that genetic factors can determine susceptibility to hypertension-induced renal damage, we derived an experimental animal model in which two genetically different yet histocompatible kidneys are chronically and simultaneously exposed to the same blood pressure profile and metabolic environment within the same host. Kidneys from normotensive Brown Norway rats were transplanted into unilaterally nephrectomized spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR-RT1.N strain) that harbor the major histocompatibility complex of the Brown Norway strain. 25 d after the induction of severe hypertension with deoxycorticosterone acetate and salt, proteinuria, impaired glomerular filtration rate, and extensive vascular and glomerular injury were observed in the Brown Norway donor kidneys, but not in the SHR-RT1.N kidneys. Control experiments demonstrated that the strain differences in kidney damage could not be attributed to effects of transplantation-induced renal injury, immunologic rejection phenomena, or preexisting strain differences in blood pressure. These studies (a) demonstrate that the kidney of the normotensive Brown Norway rat is inherently much more susceptible to hypertension-induced damage than is the kidney of the spontaneously hypertensive rat, and (b) establish the feasibility of using organ-specific genome transplants to map genes expressed in the kidney that determine susceptibility to hypertension-induced renal injury in the rat.


American Journal of Kidney Diseases | 1990

Use of the Serum Creatinine to Estimate Glomerular Filtration Rate in Health and Early Diabetic Nephropathy

Jacob Lemann; Anil K. Bidani; Raymond P. Bain; Edmund J. Lewis; Richard D. Rohde

We evaluated 100/serum creatinine, 24-hour creatinine clearance, and simultaneously measured creatinine clearance or creatinine clearance estimated by the formula devised by Cockcroft and Gault in comparison with measurements of glomerular filtration rate (GFR) using iothalamate among 136 patients with diabetic nephropathy. We also evaluated 100/serum creatinine, simultaneously measured creatinine clearance or creatinine clearance estimated by the Cockcroft and Gault formula in comparison with measurements of GFR using inulin among 88 healthy adults, 21 hypercalciuric kidney stone formers and their hypercalciuric relatives, and one man with chronic nephritis. Creatinine clearances measured simultaneously were closely correlated to GFR (r = 0.93) as were creatinine clearances, estimated by the Cockcroft and Gault formula (r = 0.84) when GFR ranged from 16 to 175 mL/min (0.27 to 2.92 mL/s). These observations confirm the clinical use of either creatinine clearances during water diuresis or estimates of creatinine clearance by the Cockcroft and Gault formula in the assessment of kidney function.

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Maria M. Picken

Loyola University Medical Center

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Geoffrey A. Williamson

Illinois Institute of Technology

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Isam Abu-Amarah

Loyola University Medical Center

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Manjeri A. Venkatachalam

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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