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Dive into the research topics where Liselotte Pihl is active.

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Featured researches published by Liselotte Pihl.


Laboratory Animals | 2003

Faecal corticosterone and immunoglobulin A in young adult rats

Liselotte Pihl; Jann Hau

Quantitative analyses of relevant molecules in faeces may have potential as future non-invasive measures of stress. This study examined levels of faecal corticosterone and immunoglobulin A (IgA) in young adult rats and how these levels varied according to age, gender and time of day. Faecal samples were collected from 40 young adult rats (7 weeks old, n = 20 and 10 weeks old, n = 20) of both sexes from two time windows: day and night. The concentrations of corticosterone and IgA were measured by ELISAs following organic solvent extraction and aqueous extraction, respectively, of the molecules from faecal pellets. The production of faeces per time unit was higher in males than in females, and linear correlations were found between the faecal concentrations of corticosterone and IgA and total amounts of the respective molecules excreted in faeces per kg body weight per hour. In all further analyses the levels of the two molecules were calculated as amounts secreted per kg of body weight per hour. There was no gender difference between females and males in the production of corticosterone and IgA, but 7-week-old animals excreted significantly higher amounts of both molecules than did 10-week-old rats. The levels of IgA excreted by female rats were higher in the evening than in the morning, and male rats excreted higher concentrations of corticosterone in the morning than in the evening.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2015

Acute SGLT inhibition normalizes O2 tension in the renal cortex but causes hypoxia in the renal medulla in anaesthetized control and diabetic rats

Julie O'Neill; Angelica Fasching; Liselotte Pihl; Daniela Patinha; Stephanie Franzén; Fredrik Palm

Early stage diabetic nephropathy is characterized by glomerular hyperfiltration and reduced renal tissue Po2. Recent observations have indicated that increased tubular Na(+)-glucose linked transport (SGLT) plays a role in the development of diabetes-induced hyperfiltration. The aim of the present study was to determine how inhibition of SLGT impacts upon Po2 in the diabetic rat kidney. Diabetes was induced by streptozotocin in Sprague-Dawley rats 2 wk before experimentation. Renal hemodynamics, excretory function, and renal O2 homeostasis were measured in anesthetized control and diabetic rats during baseline and after acute SGLT inhibition using phlorizin (200 mg/kg ip). Baseline arterial pressure was similar in both groups and unaffected by SGLT inhibition. Diabetic animals displayed reduced baseline Po2 in both the cortex and medulla. SGLT inhibition improved cortical Po2 in the diabetic kidney, whereas it reduced medullary Po2 in both groups. SGLT inhibition reduced Na(+) transport efficiency [tubular Na(+) transport (TNa)/renal O2 consumption (Qo2)] in the control kidney, whereas the already reduced TNa/Qo2 in the diabetic kidney was unaffected by SGLT inhibition. In conclusion, these data demonstrate that when SGLT is inhibited, renal cortex Po2 in the diabetic rat kidney is normalized, which implies that increased proximal tubule transport contributes to the development of hypoxia in the diabetic kidney. The reduction in medullary Po2 in both control and diabetic kidneys during the inhibition of proximal Na(+) reabsorption suggests the redistribution of active Na(+) transport to less efficient nephron segments, such as the medullary thick ascending limb, which results in medullary hypoxia.


Acta Physiologica | 2006

Luminal hypotonicity increases duodenal mucosal permeability by a mechanism involving 5-hydroxytryptamine

Olof Nylander; Liselotte Pihl

Aim:  To investigate whether 5‐hydroxytryptamine (5‐HT) participates in the mediation of the hypotonicity‐induced increase in duodenal mucosal permeability.


Acta Physiologica | 2006

Products of cyclooxygenase-2 depress duodenal function in rats subjected to abdominal surgery

Liselotte Pihl; Olof Nylander

Aim:  Abdominal surgery evokes powerful biological responses that affect gastrointestinal functions. Here we investigate the role of the cyclooxygenase‐1 (COX‐1) and cyclooxygenase‐2 (COX‐2) isoforms in post‐operative duodenal ileus.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2016

Pronounced kidney hypoxia precedes albuminuria in type 1 diabetic mice

Stephanie Franzén; Liselotte Pihl; Nadeem Khan; Håkan Gustafsson; Fredrik Palm

Intrarenal tissue hypoxia has been proposed as a unifying mechanism for the development of chronic kidney disease, including diabetic nephropathy. However, hypoxia has to be present before the onset of kidney disease to be the causal mechanism. To establish whether hypoxia precedes the onset of diabetic nephropathy, we implemented a minimally invasive electron paramagnetic resonance oximetry technique using implanted oxygen sensing probes for repetitive measurements of in vivo kidney tissue oxygen tensions in mice. Kidney cortex oxygen tensions were measured before and up to 15 days after the induction of insulinopenic diabetes in male mice and compared with normoglycemic controls. On day 16, urinary albumin excretions and conscious glomerular filtration rates were determined to define the temporal relationship between intrarenal hypoxia and disease development. Diabetic mice developed pronounced intrarenal hypoxia 3 days after the induction of diabetes, which persisted throughout the study period. On day 16, diabetic mice had glomerular hyperfiltration, but normal urinary albumin excretion. In conclusion, intrarenal tissue hypoxia in diabetes precedes albuminuria thereby being a plausible cause for the onset and progression of diabetic nephropathy.


Acta Physiologica | 2008

Comparative study of the effect of luminal hypotonicity on mucosal permeability in rat upper gastrointestinal tract

Liselotte Pihl; Erik Wilander; Olof Nylander

Aim:  To investigate whether the increase in mucosal permeability in the duodenum, induced by luminal hypotonicity, also occurs in the stomach and the jejunum and whether this increase in permeability can be explained by epithelial injury.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2012

Insulin induces the correlation between renal blood flow and glomerular filtration rate in diabetes - Implications for mechanisms causing hyperfiltration

Liselotte Pihl; Patrik Persson; Angelica Fasching; Peter Hansell; Gerald F. DiBona; Fredrik Palm

Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and renal blood flow (RBF) are normally kept constant via renal autoregulation. However, early diabetes results in increased GFR and the potential mechanisms are debated. Tubuloglomerular feedback (TGF) inactivation, with concomitantly increased RBF, is proposed but challenged by the finding of glomerular hyperfiltration in diabetic adenosine A(1) receptor-deficient mice, which lack TGF. Furthermore, we consistently find elevated GFR in diabetes with only minor changes in RBF. This may relate to the use of a lower streptozotocin dose, which produces a degree of hyperglycemia, which is manageable without supplemental suboptimal insulin administration, as has been used by other investigators. Therefore, we examined the relationship between RBF and GFR in diabetic rats with (diabetes + insulin) and without suboptimal insulin administration (untreated diabetes). As insulin can affect nitric oxide (NO) release, the role of NO was also investigated. GFR, RBF, and glomerular filtration pressures were measured. Dynamic RBF autoregulation was examined by transfer function analysis between arterial pressure and RBF. Both diabetic groups had increased GFR (+60-67%) and RBF (+20-23%) compared with controls. However, only the diabetes + insulin group displayed a correlation between GFR and RBF (R(2) = 0.81, P < 0.0001). Net filtration pressure was increased in untreated diabetes compared with both other groups. The difference between untreated and insulin-treated diabetic rats disappeared after administering N(ω)-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester to inhibit NO synthase and subsequent NO release. In conclusion, mechanisms causing diabetes-induced glomerular hyperfiltration are animal model-dependent. Supplemental insulin administration results in a RBF-dependent mechanism, whereas elevated GFR in untreated diabetes is mediated primarily by a tubular event. Insulin-induced NO release partially contributes to these differences.


Acta Physiologica | 2010

Motility-induced but not vasoactive intestinal peptide-induced increase in luminal alkalinization in rat duodenum is dependent on luminal Cl-

Liselotte Pihl; Markus Sjöblom; Ursula Seidler; John Sedin; Olof Nylander

Aim:  To investigate whether the motility‐ and the vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP)‐induced increase in luminal alkalinization in the duodenum is dependent on luminal Cl−.


Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology | 2014

Repetitive Measurements of Intrarenal Oxygenation In Vivo Using L Band Electron Paramagnetic Resonance

Stephanie Franzén; Liselotte Pihl; Nadeem Khan; Fredrik Palm; Håkan Gustafsson

Intrarenal oxygenation is heterogeneous with oxygen levels normally being highest in the superficial cortex and lowest in the inner medulla. Reduced intrarenal oxygenation has been implied in the pathology of several kidney diseases. However, there is currently no method available to repetitively monitor regional renal oxygenation using minimally invasive procedures. We therefore evaluated implantable lithium phthalocyanine (LiPc) probes, which display a close correlation between EPR line width and oxygen availability.LiPc probes were implanted in the kidney cortex and medulla in the same mouse and EPR spectra were acquired using a L band scanner during inhalation of air (21 % oxygen) or a mixture of air and nitrogen (10 % oxygen). In order to separate the signals from the two probes, a 1 G/cm gradient was applied and the signals were derived from 40 consecutive sweeps. Peak-to-peak comparison of the EPR line was used to convert the signal to an approximate oxygen tension in MATLAB. Kidney cortex as well as medullary oxygenation was stable over the 45 day period (cortex 56 ± 7 mmHg and medulla 43 ± 6 mmHg). However, 10 % oxygen inhalation significantly reduced oxygenation in both cortex (56 ± 6 to 34 ± 2 mmHg n = 15 p < 0.05) and medulla (42 ± 5 to 29 ± 3 mmHg n = 7 p < 0.05).In conclusion, L band EPR using LiPc probes implanted in discrete intrarenal structures can be used to repetitively monitor regional renal oxygenation. This minimally invasive method is especially well suited for conditions of reduced intrarenal oxygenation since this increases the signal intensity which facilitates the quantification of the EPR signal to absolute oxygenation values.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2018

Intrarenal activation of endothelin type B receptors improves kidney oxygenation in type 1 diabetic rats

Stephanie Franzén; Liselotte Pihl; Angelica Fasching; Fredrik Palm

About one-third of patients with type 1 diabetes develops kidney disease. The mechanism is largely unknown, but intrarenal hypoxia has been proposed as a unifying mechanism for chronic kidney disease, including diabetic nephropathy. The endothelin system has recently been demonstrated to regulate oxygen availability in the diabetic kidney via a pathway involving endothelin type A receptors (ETA-R). These receptors mainly mediate vasoconstriction and tubular sodium retention, and inhibition of ETA-R improves intrarenal oxygenation in the diabetic kidney. Endothelin type B receptors (ETB-R) can induce vasodilation of the renal vasculature and also regulate tubular sodium handling. However, the role of ETB-R in kidney oxygen homeostasis is unknown. The effects of acute intrarenal ETB-R activation (sarafotoxin 6c for 30-40 min; 0.78 pmol/h directly into the renal artery) on kidney function and oxygen metabolism were investigated in normoglycemic controls and insulinopenic male Sprague-Dawley rats administered streptozotocin (55 mg/kg) 2 wk before the acute experiments. Intrarenal activation of ETB-R improved oxygenation in the hypoxic diabetic kidney. However, the effects on diabetes-induced increased kidney oxygen consumption could not explain the improved oxygenation. Rather, the improved kidney oxygenation was due to hemodynamic effects increasing oxygen delivery without increasing glomerular filtration or tubular sodium load. In conclusion, increased ETB-R signaling in the diabetic kidney improves intrarenal tissue oxygenation due to increased oxygen delivery secondary to increased renal blood flow.

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