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Featured researches published by Kristina Blouch.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2005

Detection of Renal Function Decline in Patients with Diabetes and Normal or Elevated GFR by Serial Measurements of Serum Cystatin C Concentration: Results of a 4-Year Follow-Up Study

Bruce A. Perkins; Robert G. Nelson; Betsy E.P. Ostrander; Kristina Blouch; Andrzej S. Krolewski; Bryan D. Myers; James H. Warram

Research on early renal function decline in diabetes is hampered by lack of simple tools for detecting trends (particularly systematic decreases) in renal function over time when GFR is normal or elevated. This study sought to assess how well serum cystatin C meets that need. Thirty participants with type 2 diabetes in the Diabetic Renal Disease Study met these three eligibility criteria: GFR >20 ml/min per 1.73 m2 at baseline (based on cold iothalamate clearance), 4 yr of follow-up, and yearly measurements of iothalamate clearance and serum cystatin C. With the use of linear regression, each individuals trend in renal function over time, expressed as annual percentage change in iothalamate clearance, was determined. Serum cystatin C in mg/L was transformed to its reciprocal (100/cystatin C), and linear regression was used to determine each individuals trend over time, expressed as annual percentage change. In paired comparisons of 100/cystatin C with iothalamate clearance at each examination, the two measures were numerically similar. More important, the trends in 100/cystatin C and iothalamate clearance were strongly correlated (Spearman r = 0.77). All 20 participants with negative trends in iothalamate clearance (declining renal function) also had negative trends for 100/cystatin C. Results were discordant for only three participants. In contrast, the trends for three commonly used creatinine-based estimates of GFR compared poorly with trends in iothalamate clearance (Spearman r < 0.35). Serial measures of serum cystatin C accurately detect trends in renal function in patients with normal or elevated GFR and provide means for studying early renal function decline in diabetes.


Kidney International | 2012

Podocyte detachment and reduced glomerular capillary endothelial fenestration promote kidney disease in type 2 diabetic nephropathy

E. Jennifer Weil; Kevin V. Lemley; Clinton C. Mason; Berne Yee; Lois I. Jones; Kristina Blouch; Tracy Lovato; Meghan Richardson; Bryan D. Myers; Robert G. Nelson

Podocyte detachment and reduced endothelial cell fenestration and relationships between these features and the classic structural changes of diabetic nephropathy have not been described in patients with type 2 diabetes. Here we studied these relationships in 37 Pima Indians with type 2 diabetes of whom 11 had normal albuminuria, 16 had microalbuminuria, and 10 had macroalbuminuria. Biopsies from ten kidney donors (not Americans Indians) showed almost undetectable (0.03%) podocyte detachment and 43.5% endothelial cell fenestration. In patients with type 2 diabetes, by comparison, the mean percentage of podocyte detachment was significantly higher in macroalbuminuria (1.48%) than in normal albuminuria (0.41%) or microalbuminuria (0.37%). Podocyte detachment correlated significantly with podocyte number per glomerulus and albuminuria. The mean percentage of endothelial cell fenestration was significantly lower in macroalbuminuria (19.3%) than in normal (27.4%) or microalbuminuria (27.2%) and correlated significantly with glomerular basement membrane thickness, albuminuria, fractional mesangial area, and the glomerular filtration rate (iothalamate clearance). Podocyte detachment and diminished endothelial cell fenestration were not correlated, but were related to classic lesions of diabetic nephropathy. Thus, our findings confirm the important role these injuries play in the development and progression of kidney disease in type 2 diabetes, just as they do in type 1 diabetes. Whether podocyte detachment creates conduits for proteins to escape the glomerular circulation and reduced endothelial fenestration lowers glomerular hydraulic permeability requires further study.


Kidney International | 2010

Effects of aging on glomerular function and number in living kidney donors

Jane C. Tan; Stephan Busque; Biruh Workeneh; Bing Ho; Geraldine C. Derby; Kristina Blouch; F. Graham Sommer; Byard Edwards; Bryan D. Myers

To elucidate the pathophysiologic changes in the kidney due to aging, we used physiological, morphometric, and imaging techniques to quantify GFR and its determinants in a group of 24 older (≥ 55 years) compared to 33 younger (≤ 45 years) living donors. Mathematical modeling was used to estimate the glomerular filtration coefficients for the whole kidney (K(f)) and for single nephrons (SNK(f)), as well as the number of filtering glomeruli (N(FG)). Compared to younger donors, older donors had a modest (15%) but significant depression of pre-donation GFR. Mean whole-kidney K(f), renocortical volume, and derived N(FG) were also significantly decreased in older donors. In contrast, glomerular structure and SNK(f) were not different in older and younger donors. Derived N(FG) in the bottom quartile of older donors was less than 27% of median-derived N(FG) in the two kidneys of younger donors. Nevertheless, the remaining kidney of older donors exhibited adaptive hyperfiltration and renocortical hypertrophy post-donation, comparable to that of younger donors. Thus, our study found the decline of GFR in older donors is due to a reduction in K(f) attributable to glomerulopenia. We recommend careful monitoring for and control of post-donation comorbidities that could exacerbate glomerular loss.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2015

Longitudinal study of living kidney donor glomerular dynamics after nephrectomy

Colin R. Lenihan; Stephan Busque; Geraldine C. Derby; Kristina Blouch; Bryan D. Myers; Jane C. Tan

BACKGROUND Over 5,000 living kidney donor nephrectomies are performed annually in the US. While the physiological changes that occur early after nephrectomy are well documented, less is known about the long-term glomerular dynamics in living donors. METHODS We enrolled 21 adult living kidney donors to undergo detailed long-term clinical, physiological, and radiological evaluation pre-, early post- (median, 0.8 years), and late post- (median, 6.3 years) donation. A morphometric analysis of glomeruli obtained during nephrectomy was performed in 19 subjects. RESULTS Donors showed parallel increases in single-kidney renal plasma flow (RPF), renocortical volume, and glomerular filtration rate (GFR) early after the procedure, and these changes were sustained through to the late post-donation period. We used mathematical modeling to estimate the glomerular ultrafiltration coefficient (Kf), which also increased early and then remained constant through the late post-donation study. Assuming that the filtration surface area (and hence, Kf) increased in proportion to renocortical volume after donation, we calculated that the 40% elevation in the single-kidney GFR observed after donation could be attributed exclusively to an increase in the Kf. The prevalence of hypertension in donors increased from 14% in the early post-donation period to 57% in the late post-donation period. No subjects exhibited elevated levels of albuminuria. CONCLUSIONS Adaptive hyperfiltration after donor nephrectomy is attributable to hyperperfusion and hypertrophy of the remaining glomeruli. Our findings point away from the development of glomerular hypertension following kidney donation. TRIAL REGISTRATION Not applicable. FUNDING. NIH (R01DK064697 and K23DK087937); Astellas Pharma US; the John M. Sobrato Foundation; the Satellite Extramural Grant Foundation; and the American Society of Nephrology.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2008

Course of preeclamptic glomerular injury after delivery

Michelle A. Hladunewich; Bryan D. Myers; Geraldine C. Derby; Kristina Blouch; Maurice L. Druzin; W M Deen; D. M. Naimark; Richard A. Lafayette

We evaluated the early postpartum recovery of glomerular function over 4 wk in 57 women with preeclampsia. We used physiological techniques to measure glomerular filtration rate (GFR), renal plasma flow, and oncotic pressure (pi(A)) and computed a value for the two-kidney ultrafiltration coefficient (K(f)). Compared with healthy, postpartum controls, GFR was depressed by 40% on postpartum day 1, but by only 19% and 8% in the second and fourth postpartum weeks, respectively. Hypofiltration was attributable solely to depression, at corresponding postpartum times, of K(f) by 55%, 30%, and 18%, respectively. Improvement in glomerular filtration capacity was accompanied by recovery of hypertension to near-normal levels and significant improvement in albuminuria. We conclude that the functional manifestations of the glomerular endothelial injury of preeclampsia largely resolve within the first postpartum month.


Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2006

Effect of L-arginine therapy on the glomerular injury of preeclampsia: a randomized controlled trial.

Michelle A. Hladunewich; Geraldine C. Derby; Richard A. Lafayette; Kristina Blouch; Maurice L. Druzin; Bryan D. Myers

OBJECTIVE: To assess the benefit of l-arginine, the precursor to nitric oxide, on blood pressure and recovery of the glomerular lesion in preeclampsia. METHODS: Forty-five women with preeclampsia were randomized to receive either l-arginine or placebo until day 10 postpartum. Primary outcome measures including mean arterial pressure, glomerular filtration rate, and proteinuria were assessed on the third and 10th days postpartum by inulin clearance and albumin-to-creatinine ratio. Nitric oxide, cyclic guanosine 3′5′ monophosphate, endothelin-1, and asymmetric-dimethyl-arginine and arginine levels were assayed before delivery and on the third and 10th days postpartum. Healthy gravid women provided control values. Assuming a standard deviation of 10 mm Hg, the study was powered to detect a 10-mm Hg difference in mean arterial pressure (α .05, β .20) between the study groups. RESULTS: No significant differences existed between the groups with preeclampsia before randomization. Compared with the gravid control group, women with preeclampsia exhibited significantly increased serum levels of endothelin-1, cyclic guanosine 3′5′ monophosphate, and asymmetric-dimethyl-arginine before delivery. Despite a significant increase in postpartum serum arginine levels due to treatment, no differences were found in the corresponding levels of nitric oxide, endothelin-1, cyclic guanosine 3′5′ monophosphate, or asymmetric-dimethyl-arginine between the two groups with preeclampsia. Further, there were no significant differences in any of the primary outcome measures with both groups demonstrating similar levels in glomerular filtration rate and equivalent improvements in both blood pressure and proteinuria. CONCLUSION: Blood pressure and kidney function improve markedly in preeclampsia by the 10th day postpartum. Supplementation with l-arginine does not hasten this recovery. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: I


Clinical Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2010

Imprecision of Creatinine-Based GFR Estimates in Uninephric Kidney Donors

Jane C. Tan; Bing Ho; Stephan Busque; Kristina Blouch; Geraldine C. Derby; Bradley Efron; Bryan D. Myers

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES To ensure long-term safety of living kidney donors, it is now recommended that they be followed for at least 2 years after donation and that serum creatinine levels be monitored. Such levels are often subjected by clinical laboratories to estimating equations and are reported as estimated GFR (eGFR). The accuracy of such equations in uninephric living donors has yet to be validated. This is especially important in older living donors, who often have senescence-related depression of GFR. DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS We compared urinary creatinine clearance, four-variable Modification of Diet in Renal Disease estimating equation (eGFR), and the recently reported CKD-EPI GFR estimating equation with true GFR measured by the urinary iothalamate clearance (iGFR) in 64 subjects after kidney donation. RESULTS Creatinine clearance overestimated iGFR. Both creatinine-based estimating equations were poorly correlated with and underestimated iGFR. More than half of kidney donors had eGFR <60 ml/min per 1.73 m(2) after donation, a level that categorized them as having stage 3 chronic kidney disease by our current laboratory reporting, whereas only 25% had iGFR <60 ml/min per 1.73 m(2). This misclassification disproportionately affected older donors age > or =55 years, of whom 80% had eGFR <60 ml/min per 1.73 m(2). Neither significant albuminuria nor hypertension was observed. CONCLUSIONS The current practice of reporting eGFR after donation commonly leads to a misclassification of chronic kidney disease, particularly in older donors. To ensure long-term well-being of living kidney donors, more precise estimates of GFR are required, particularly among older potential donors.


Diabetologia | 1999

Changing glomerular filtration with progression from impaired glucose tolerance to Type II diabetes mellitus

Robert G. Nelson; Ming Tan; Gerald J. Beck; P. H. Bennett; W. C. Knowler; William E. Mitch; Kristina Blouch; Bryan D. Myers

Summary Glomerular filtration rate (iothalamate clearance) was measured serially for 48 months in 26 Pima Indians with impaired glucose tolerance and 27 with normal glucose tolerance. At baseline, the mean glomerular filtration rate (SEM) was 133 ± 8 ml/min in subjects with impaired glucose tolerance and 123 ± 5 ml/min in those with normal glucose tolerance (p = 0.12). In the 12 subjects with impaired glucose tolerance who progressed to Type II (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes during follow-up, mean glomerular filtration rate increased by 30 % (p = 0.011). Among the remaining 14 subjects with impaired glucose tolerance, 12 reverted to normoglycaemia. The glomerular filtration rate both at baseline and after 48 months in this subgroup exceeded the values of subjects with normal glucose tolerance by 20 % (p = 0.008) and 14 % (p = 0.013), respectively. A pronounced rise in the glomerular filtration rate occurs at the onset of Type II diabetes but a trend to hyperfiltration is also present in those with impaired glucose tolerance. [Diabetologia (1999) 42: 90–93]


Clinical Nephrology | 2011

Serum relaxin levels and kidney function in late pregnancy with or without preeclampsia.

Richard A. Lafayette; Michelle A. Hladunewich; Geraldine C. Derby; Kristina Blouch; Maurice L. Druzin; Bryan D. Myers

OBJECTIVE Relaxin, a potent pregnancy-related hormone, has been proposed to be a major mediator of renal physiology in normal pregnancy. We wished to test relaxin levels in pregnancy and preeclampsia. METHODS We performed precise physiologic measurements of kidney function in 38 normal peripartum women and 58 women with preeclampsia. We measured serum relaxin levels prior to delivery and over the first 4 postpartum weeks utilizing a modern, validated ELISA. Results were compared to those of 18 normal women of childbearing age. RESULTS Relaxin levels were substantially elevated in women prior to delivery (364 ± 268 vs. 15 ± 16 pg/ml) and fell rapidly over the first postpartum week reaching normal non pregnant levels by Week 2 (32 ± 64 vs. 15 ± 16 pg/ml). No differences were seen between relaxin levels in normal pregnancy as compared to preeclampsia (364 ± 268 vs. 376 ± 241 pg/ml) despite substantial and persistent abnormalities in GFR (149 ± 33 vs. 89 ± 25 ml/min), albuminuria (14 vs. 687 mg/g) and mean arterial pressure (80 ± 8 vs. 111 ± 18). Furthermore no correlation could be established between physiologic measures (GFR, MAP, RBF, RVR) and relaxin levels (p > 0.3), either in the overall population or any of the subgroups. CONCLUSION Relaxin is indeed significantly elevated in the serum of women during late pregnancy and the early puerperium. However, serum relaxin does not appear to influence BP, renal vascular resistance, renal blood flow or GFR in late pregnancy or in women with preeclampsia.


Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry | 2007

Alteration in Renal Organic Anion Transporter 1 After Ischemia/Reperfusion in Cadaveric Renal Allografts

Osun Kwon; Seok-Min Hong; Kristina Blouch

We have previously shown that postischemic injury to renal allografts results in profound impairment of p-aminohippuric acid (PAH) extraction. To elucidate the cellular integrity of the human organic anion transporter 1 (hOAT1) in postischemic acute renal failure (ARF), immunohistochemical analysis of hOAT1 was performed in cadaveric renal allografts using confocal microscopy for three-dimensional reconstruction of serial optical images. Biopsy samples were obtained from 10 cadaveric renal allografts 1 hr after reperfusion during transplant operation. Control tissues were obtained from four living donors of healthy kidneys immediately before an arterial clamp was applied to the renal artery. Control tissues demonstrated hOAT1 distributed to basolateral membrane of proximal tubule cells. In contrast, maldistribution of hOAT1 to cytoplasm and/or diminution of the protein was noted in cadaveric allografts. Characteristics of maldistribution were variable: disappearance of lateral distribution, diffuse cytoplasmic aggregates, apical cytoplasmic aggregates, and disappearance of the staining. In addition, iothalamate and PAH clearances were performed on posttransplant days 3–7 in 18 recipients of a cadaveric renal allograft. PAH clearance was depressed <250 ml/min in all but three subjects. We conclude that reperfused, transplanted kidneys exhibit maldistribution of hOAT1 in proximal tubule cells, resulting in impairment of PAH clearance. This manuscript contains online supplemental material at http://www.jhc.org. Please visit this article online to view these materials.

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Kevin V. Lemley

University of Southern California

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Robert G. Nelson

National Institutes of Health

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Michelle A. Hladunewich

Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre

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Bing Ho

Northwestern University

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