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Dive into the research topics where Bert Flemming is active.

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Featured researches published by Bert Flemming.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2007

Viscosity of contrast media perturbs renal hemodynamics.

Erdmann Seeliger; Bert Flemming; Thomas Wronski; Mechthild Ladwig; Karen Arakelyan; Michael Godes; Martin Möckel; Pontus B. Persson

Contrast-induced nephropathy is a common cause of acute renal failure, and the mechanisms underlying this injury are not completely understood. We sought to determine how physicochemical properties of contrast media may contribute to kidney damage in rats. We administered contrast media of equivalent iodine concentrations but differing physiocochemical properties: the high-osmolality iopromide was compared to the high-viscosity iodixanol. In addition, the non-iodinated substances mannitol (equivalent osmolality to iopromide) and dextran (equivalent viscosity to iodixanol) were also studied. Both types of contrast media transiently increased renal and hindquarter blood flow. The high-osmolality agents iopromide and mannitol markedly increased urine production whereas iodixanol, which caused less diuresis, significantly enhanced urine viscosity. Only the high-viscosity agents iodixanol and dextran decreased renal medullary blood flux, erythrocyte concentration, and pO2. Moreover, iodixanol prolonged the tubuloglomerular feedback response and increased plasma creatinine levels to a greater extent than iopromide or dextran. Therefore, the viscosity of contrast media may play a significant role in contrast-induced nephropathy.


Radiology | 2010

Up to 50-fold Increase in Urine Viscosity with Iso-osmolar Contrast Media in the Rat

Erdmann Seeliger; Klaus Becker; Mechthild Ladwig; Thomas Wronski; Pontus B. Persson; Bert Flemming

PURPOSE To compare changes in urinary viscosity in the renal tubules following administration of a high-viscosity iso-osmolar contrast agent (iodixanol) to that observed following administration of a less viscous, higher osmolar contrast agent (iopromide) in anesthetized rats. MATERIALS AND METHODS A total of 43 rats were studied. Experiments were approved by the Berlin, Germany, animal protection administration. A viscometer was developed to measure viscosity in minute samples (7 microL). Urine was collected, viscosity was measured (at 37 degrees C), and glomerular filtration rate (GFR) was determined by means of creatinine clearance. Boluses of 1.5 mL of iodixanol (320 mg iodine per milliliter, iso-osmolar to plasma, high viscosity) or iopromide (370 mg iodine per milliliter, higher osmolality and lower viscosity than iodixanol) were injected into the thoracic aorta. There were five groups (seven rats per group). Groups 1 (iodixanol) and 2 (iopromide) had free access to water prior to the experiment; groups 3 (iodixanol) and 4 (iopromide) received an additional infusion of isotonic saline (4 mL/kg/h). Group 5 was treated as group 1 but received only 0.75 mL of iodixanol. The observation period was 100 minutes. Statistical comparisons were made by means of nonparametric procedures (Friedman test, Kruskal-Wallis test). RESULTS Iodixanol increased urine viscosity from 0.69 to 36.7 mm(2)/sec; thus, urine became threefold more viscous than native iodixanol solution. The increase in urine viscosity after injection of iopromide was from 0.73 to 2.3 mm(2)/sec. While GFR was not significantly affected by iopromide, GFR transiently decreased by 50% after administration of iodixanol. Iopromide had a diuretic effect twofold greater than that of iodixanol. Saline infusion blunted the viscosity rise and transient decline in GFR caused by iodixanol, as did reducing the iodixanol dose by 50%. CONCLUSION Contrast media, in particular iodixanol, increase urine viscosity (which is equal to tubular fluid viscosity in the collecting ducts); in response to iodixanol, GFR markedly decreases. Saline infusion attenuates this response, thus potentially explaining the protective effects of volume expansion in contrast medium-induced nephropathy.


Kidney International | 2011

Inhibition of 20-HETE synthesis and action protects the kidney from ischemia/reperfusion injury.

Uwe Hoff; Ivo Lukitsch; Lyubov Chaykovska; Mechthild Ladwig; Cosima Arnold; Vijay L. Manthati; T. Florian Fuller; Wolfgang Schneider; Maik Gollasch; Dominik Müller; Bert Flemming; Erdmann Seeliger; Friedrich C. Luft; John R. Falck; Duska Dragun; Wolf Hagen Schunck

20-Hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (20-HETE) production is increased in ischemic kidney tissue and may contribute to ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury by mediating vasoconstriction and inflammation. To test this hypothesis, uninephrectomized male Lewis rats were exposed to warm ischemia following pretreatment with either an inhibitor of 20-HETE synthesis (HET0016), an antagonist (20-hydroxyeicosa-6(Z),15(Z)-dienoic acid), an agonist (20-hydroxyeicosa-5(Z),14(Z)-dienoic acid), or vehicle via the renal artery and the kidneys were examined 2 days after reperfusion. Pretreatment with either the inhibitor or the antagonist attenuated I/R-induced renal dysfunction as shown by improved creatinine clearance and decreased plasma urea levels, compared to controls. The inhibitor and antagonist also markedly reduced tubular lesion scores, inflammatory cell infiltration, and tubular epithelial cell apoptosis. Administering the antagonist accelerated the recovery of medullary perfusion, as well as renal medullary and cortical re-oxygenation, during the early reperfusion phase. In contrast, the agonist did not improve renal injury and reversed the beneficial effect of the inhibitor. Thus, 20-HETE generation and its action mediated kidney injury due to I/R. Whether or not these effects are clinically important will need to be tested in appropriate human studies.


Acta Physiologica | 2015

How bold is blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) magnetic resonance imaging of the kidney? Opportunities, challenges and future directions.

Thoralf Niendorf; Andreas Pohlmann; Karen Arakelyan; Bert Flemming; Jan Hentschel; Dirk Grosenick; Mechthild Ladwig; Henning Matthias Reimann; Sabrina Klix; Sonia Waiczies; Erdmann Seeliger

Renal tissue hypoperfusion and hypoxia are key elements in the pathophysiology of acute kidney injury and its progression to chronic kidney disease. Yet, in vivo assessment of renal haemodynamics and tissue oxygenation remains a challenge. Many of the established approaches are invasive, hence not applicable in humans. Blood oxygenation level‐dependent (BOLD) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) offers an alternative. BOLD‐MRI is non‐invasive and indicative of renal tissue oxygenation. Nonetheless, recent (pre‐) clinical studies revived the question as to how bold renal BOLD‐MRI really is. This review aimed to deliver some answers. It is designed to inspire the renal physiology, nephrology and imaging communities to foster explorations into the assessment of renal oxygenation and haemodynamics by exploiting the powers of MRI. For this purpose, the specifics of renal oxygenation and perfusion are outlined. The fundamentals of BOLD‐MRI are summarized. The link between tissue oxygenation and the oxygenation‐sensitive MR biomarker T2∗ is outlined. The merits and limitations of renal BOLD‐MRI in animal and human studies are surveyed together with their clinical implications. Explorations into detailing the relation between renal T2∗ and renal tissue partial pressure of oxygen (pO2) are discussed with a focus on factors confounding the T2∗ vs. tissue pO2 relation. Multi‐modality in vivo approaches suitable for detailing the role of the confounding factors that govern T2∗ are considered. A schematic approach describing the link between renal perfusion, oxygenation, tissue compartments and renal T2∗ is proposed. Future directions of MRI assessment of renal oxygenation and perfusion are explored.


Investigative Radiology | 2014

Detailing the relation between renal T2* and renal tissue pO2 using an integrated approach of parametric magnetic resonance imaging and invasive physiological measurements.

Andreas Pohlmann; Karen Arakelyan; Jan Hentschel; Bert Flemming; Mechthild Ladwig; Sonia Waiczies; Erdmann Seeliger; Thoralf Niendorf

ObjectivesThis study was designed to detail the relation between renal T2* and renal tissue pO2 using an integrated approach that combines parametric magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and quantitative physiological measurements (MR-PHYSIOL). Materials and MethodsExperiments were performed in 21 male Wistar rats. In vivo modulation of renal hemodynamics and oxygenation was achieved by brief periods of aortic occlusion, hypoxia, and hyperoxia. Renal perfusion pressure (RPP), renal blood flow (RBF), local cortical and medullary tissue pO2, and blood flux were simultaneously recorded together with T2*, T2 mapping, and magnetic resonance–based kidney size measurements (MR-PHYSIOL). Magnetic resonance imaging was carried out on a 9.4-T small-animal magnetic resonance system. Relative changes in the invasive quantitative parameters were correlated with relative changes in the parameters derived from MRI using Spearman analysis and Pearson analysis. ResultsChanges in T2* qualitatively reflected tissue pO2 changes induced by the interventions. T2* versus pO2 Spearman rank correlations were significant for all interventions, yet quantitative translation of T2*/pO2 correlations obtained for one intervention to another intervention proved not appropriate. The closest T2*/pO2 correlation was found for hypoxia and recovery. The interlayer comparison revealed closest T2*/pO2 correlations for the outer medulla and showed that extrapolation of results obtained for one renal layer to other renal layers must be made with due caution. For T2* to RBF relation, significant Spearman correlations were deduced for all renal layers and for all interventions. T2*/RBF correlations for the cortex and outer medulla were even superior to those between T2* and tissue pO2. The closest T2*/RBF correlation occurred during hypoxia and recovery. Close correlations were observed between T2* and kidney size during hypoxia and recovery and for occlusion and recovery. In both cases, kidney size correlated well with renal vascular conductance, as did renal vascular conductance with T2*. Our findings indicate that changes in T2* qualitatively mirror changes in renal tissue pO2 but are also associated with confounding factors including vascular volume fraction and tubular volume fraction. ConclusionsOur results demonstrate that MR-PHYSIOL is instrumental to detail the link between renal tissue pO2 and T2* in vivo. Unravelling the link between regional renal T2* and tissue pO2, including the role of the T2* confounding parameters vascular and tubular volume fraction and oxy-hemoglobin dissociation curve, requires further research. These explorations are essential before the quantitative capabilities of parametric MRI can be translated from experimental research to improved clinical understanding of hemodynamics/oxygenation in kidney disorders.


PLOS ONE | 2013

High temporal resolution parametric MRI monitoring of the initial ischemia/reperfusion phase in experimental acute kidney injury.

Andreas Pohlmann; Jan Hentschel; Mandy Fechner; Uwe Hoff; Gordana Bubalo; Karen Arakelyan; Erdmann Seeliger; Bert Flemming; Helmar Waiczies; Sonia Waiczies; Wolf-Hagen Schunck; Duska Dragun; Thoralf Niendorf

Ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury, a consequence of kidney hypoperfusion or temporary interruption of blood flow is a common cause of acute kidney injury (AKI). There is an unmet need to better understand the mechanisms operative during the initial phase of ischemic AKI. Non-invasive in vivo parametric magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) may elucidate spatio-temporal pathophysiological changes in the kidney by monitoring the MR relaxation parameters T2* and T2, which are known to be sensitive to blood oxygenation. The aim of our study was to establish the technical feasibility of fast continuous T2*/T2 mapping throughout renal I/R. MRI was combined with a remotely controlled I/R model and a segmentation model based semi-automated quantitative analysis. This technique enabled the detailed assessment of in vivo changes in all kidney regions during ischemia and early reperfusion. Significant changes in T2* and T2 were observed shortly after induction of renal ischemia and during the initial reperfusion phase. Our study demonstrated for the first time that continuous and high temporal resolution parametric MRI is feasible for in-vivo monitoring and characterization of I/R induced AKI in rats. This technique may help in the identification of the timeline of key events responsible for development of renal damage in hypoperfusion-induced AKI.


Acta Physiologica | 2013

Linking non-invasive parametric MRI with invasive physiological measurements (MR-PHYSIOL): towards a hybrid and integrated approach for investigation of acute kidney injury in rats

Andreas Pohlmann; Jan Hentschel; Karen Arakelyan; Mechthild Ladwig; Bert Flemming; Uwe Hoff; Pontus B. Persson; Erdmann Seeliger; Thoralf Niendorf

Acute kidney injury of various origins shares a common link in the pathophysiological chain of events: imbalance between renal medullary oxygen delivery and oxygen demand. For in vivo assessment of kidney haemodynamics and oxygenation in animals, quantitative but invasive physiological methods are established. A very limited number of studies attempted to link these invasive methods with parametric Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) of the kidney. Moreover, the validity of parametric MRI (pMRI) as a surrogate marker for renal tissue perfusion and renal oxygenation has not been systematically examined yet. For this reason, we set out to combine invasive techniques and non‐invasive MRI in an integrated hybrid setup (MR‐PHYSIOL) with the ultimate goal to calibrate, monitor and interpret parametric MR and physiological parameters by means of standardized interventions. Here we present a first report on the current status of this multi‐modality approach. For this purpose, we first highlight key characteristics of renal perfusion and oxygenation. Second, concepts for in vivo characterization of renal perfusion and oxygenation are surveyed together with the capabilities of MRI for probing blood oxygenation‐dependent tissue stages. Practical concerns evoked by the use of strong magnetic fields in MRI and interferences between MRI and invasive physiological probes are discussed. Technical solutions that balance the needs of in vivo physiological measurements together with the constraints dictated by small bore MR scanners are presented. An early implementation of the integrated MR‐PHYSIOL approach is demonstrated including brief interventions of hypoxia and hyperoxia.


Acta Physiologica | 2013

Early effects of an x-ray contrast medium on renal T2*/T2 MRI as compared to short-term hyperoxia, hypoxia and aortic occlusion in rats

Karen Arakelyan; Jan Hentschel; Bert Flemming; Andreas Pohlmann; Mechthild Ladwig; Thoralf Niendorf; Erdmann Seeliger

X‐ray contrast media (CM) can cause acute kidney injury (AKI). Medullary hypoxia is pivotal in CM‐induced AKI, as indicated by invasively and pin‐point measured tissue oxygenation. MRI provides spatially resolved blood oxygenation level–dependent data using T2* and T2 mapping. We studied CM effects on renal T2*/T2 and benchmarked them against short periods of hyperoxia, hypoxia and aortic occlusion (AO).


Investigative Radiology | 2012

Proof of principle: hydration by low-osmolar mannitol-glucose solution alleviates undesirable renal effects of an iso-osmolar contrast medium in rats.

Erdmann Seeliger; Mechthild Ladwig; Lilit Sargsyan; Pontus B. Persson; Bert Flemming

Objective:Saline infusion is widely used to prevent contrast media (CM)-induced acute kidney injury, because it fosters diuresis. Osmodiuretics have a stronger diuretic effect than saline, yet previous trials indicate that osmodiuretic mannitol tends to promote rather than to prevent CM-induced acute kidney injury. However, these studies used hypertonic mannitol solutions that will result in rebound volume contraction. We hypothesize that combining the osmodiuretic effects of a nonhypertonic mannitol solution with sustained volume expansion alleviates undesirable renal effects of CM. Materials and Methods:Forty-four anesthetized rats were studied by 4 protocols. Urine flow rate, urine viscosity, and glomerular filtration rate (GFR) were measured. Intravenous infusions of hydration solutions were initiated 60 minutes before CM administration and continued throughout the observation period. Hydration by a 3.2% mannitol and 3.2% glucose solution infused at 12 mL/kg per hour (Mannit-Gluc regimen) was compared with a standard regimen of isotonic saline at 4 mL/kg per hour (NaCl regimen); greater infusion rates are required for the Mannit-Gluc regimen because of the profound diuretic effect of mannitol. Two CM were studied: iso-osmolar iodixanol (320 mg I/mL) and low-osmolar iopromide (370 mg I/mL), they were administered as 1.5-mL bolus injection into the thoracic aorta. Results:The Mannit-Gluc regimen resulted in higher urine flow rates than the standard NaCl regimen, yet maintained a good volume status. By virtue of its stronger diuretic effect, the Mannit-Gluc regimen greatly diminished the increase in urine viscosity and completely prevented the transient decrease in GFR caused by iodixanol with the NaCl regimen. After iopromide, the differences between the hydration regimens were much less, as iopromide increased urine flow rates much more than iodixanol, thus resulting in a much smaller increase in viscosity than iodixanol and no decrease in GFR even with the NaCl regimen. Conclusion:This proof of principle study shows that a hydration regimen that combines the osmodiuretic effect of a low-osmolar mannitol-glucose solution with sustained volume expansion is effective in reducing high urine viscosity and preventing GFR reduction caused by iso-osmolar iodixanol. For low-osmolar CM, the beneficial effects seem negligible, because these compounds per se exert greater osmodiuretic action.


Investigative Radiology | 2014

Low-dose nitrite alleviates early effects of an X-ray contrast medium on renal hemodynamics and oxygenation in rats

Erdmann Seeliger; Karen Arakelyan; Mechthild Ladwig; Pontus B. Persson; Bert Flemming

ObjectiveRenal tissue hypoperfusion and hypoxia are pivotal pathophysiological elements in contrast media (CM)–induced acute kidney injury (AKI). According to a new paradigm of hypoxic vasodilation, nitrite is reduced to vasodilatory nitric oxide by hemoglobin in hypoxic areas. Here, we study the potential of low-dose nitrite administration to alleviate CM-induced AKI. Materials and MethodsIn anesthetized rats, arterial blood pressure, total renal blood flow, cortical and medullary erythrocyte flux and oxygen tension (pO2), hindquarter blood flow, and methemoglobin were measured. Nitrite was continuously infused (0.172 mg/h per kilogram of body mass for 10 minutes; thereafter, 0.057 mg/h per kilogram of body mass); control rats received isotonic saline. Hypoxic vasodilation was studied through a brief period of hypoxia (10% inspiratory oxygen fraction). Then, 1.5 mL of the CM, iodixanol of 320 mg I/mL, was injected into the thoracic aorta and the effects studied for 60 minutes. ResultsNitrite infusion slightly increased methemoglobin, but it did not change per se any other parameter including arterial pressure. However, nitrite enhanced the hypoxic vasodilation in the kidney and hindquarter (by 100% and 70%, respectively) during the brief hypoxic challenge. In the control rats, CM resulted in renal tissue hypoxia mainly because of renal vasoconstriction. Medullary and cortical pO2 dropped upon CM injection and remained 30% to 40% below pre-CM level throughout the observation period. Nitrite infusion improved renal tissue oxygenation mainly by hindering CM-induced renal vasoconstriction. After a small transient drop (<25% for <5 minutes), medullary and cortical pO2 was restored to values indistinguishable from pre-CM levels. ConclusionsLow-dose nitrite infusion greatly alleviates early adverse effects of CM on renal tissue oxygenation in rats. Nitrite’s beneficial effect probably relies on its reduction to nitric oxide in hypoxic tissue with ensuing vasodilation. Our nitrite dose resulted in a negligible increase in methemoglobin and did not induce hypotension. Thus, low-dose nitrite infusion might prove to be a reasonably specific measure to reduce the risk for CM-induced AKI.

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Dive into the Bert Flemming's collaboration.

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Thoralf Niendorf

Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine

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Andreas Pohlmann

Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine

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Pontus B. Persson

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Jan Hentschel

Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine

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Thomas Wronski

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Sonia Waiczies

Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine

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Till Huelnhagen

Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine

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