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Featured researches published by Ute Schwarz.


Hypertension | 1997

Aortic changes in experimental renal failure: Hyperplasia or hypertrophy of smooth muscle cells?

Kerstin Amann; Bettina Wolf; Cornelia Nichols; Johannes Törnig; Ute Schwarz; Martin Zeier; Gerhard Mall; Eberhard Ritz

Cardiovascular complications are a well-known feature of chronic renal failure. Increased wall thickness of intramyocardial arterioles and elastic (aorta) and peripheral (mesenteric) arteries is seen even after normalization of blood pressure. It is currently unknown whether such increases result from hyperplasia of vascular smooth muscle cells, hypertrophy, or a combination of both or from an increase in aortic extracellular matrix. Using a recently developed unbiased stereological technique (the dissector), we investigated the aortas of subtotally nephrectomized rats and sham-operated controls after perfusion fixation. We determined aortic wall thickness, cross-sectional area of aortic media, total number of vascular smooth muscle cells per unit aortic length (1 mm), mean cell and nuclear volumes, volume density of elastic fibers, extracellular matrix, vascular smooth muscle cells, and total volumes of these structures per unit of aortic length (1 mm). Blood pressure was not significantly increased in subtotally nephrectomized rats. In contrast, wall thickness, cross-sectional media, total number of aortic vascular smooth muscle cells, and volume of extracellular matrix including collagen were significantly increased after subtotal nephrectomy, whereas cellular hypertrophy was only modest and an increase in elastic fibers did not occur. In conclusion, increased aortic wall thickness in experimental renal failure results primarily from an increase in aortic extracellular matrix. In addition, however, proliferation of aortic vascular smooth muscle cells resulting in cell hyperplasia also contributed to aortic wall thickening to a minor degree. It appears that aortic wall thickening is caused by secretory stimulation of the proliferating vascular smooth muscle cells, resulting in increased matrix production. The nature of the underlying stimulus requires further investigation.


Hypertension | 1998

Nephroprotection of an ETA-Receptor Blocker (LU 135252) in Salt-Loaded Uninephrectomized Stroke-Prone Spontaneously Hypertensive Rats

Stephan R. Orth; Jan P. Esslinger; Kerstin Amann; Ute Schwarz; Manfred Raschack; Eberhard Ritz

Abstract —The present study was designed to assess whether the orally active and highly specific endothelin A (ETA) receptor antagonist LU 135252 affects progressive renal dysfunction in a hypertensive rat model of renal damage, ie, the uninephrectomized (UNX) stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHRsp). The animals were examined on a normal salt (0.25%) diet and, to sensitize the kidney to hypertensive injury, also on a high salt (3%) diet. Stereological methods were used to quantify indices of glomerulosclerosis, vascular damage, and tubulointerstitial damage. Treatment with LU 135252 (100 mg/kg body wt) did not affect systolic blood pressure (BP) in animals on a normal salt diet during the whole period of the experiment (18 weeks) or in salt-loaded animals until week 10; subsequently, BP was slightly but significantly lower in salt-loaded UNX-SHRsp given LU 135252. Between weeks 6 and 12, 40% of the untreated UNX-SHRsp on a high salt diet, but none on a standard salt diet, died; such mortality was completely prevented by LU 135252. Indices of renal damage were more abnormal in salt-loaded UNX-SHRsp compared with UNX-SHRsp on a normal salt diet. Development of glomerulosclerosis and tubulointerstitial and vascular damage in UNX-SHRsp on high salt was completely prevented by LU 135252. The respective indices were no longer significantly different from those of salt-loaded sham-operated SHRsp controls. In the less severely damaged kidneys of UNX-SHRsp on normal salt, treatment with LU 135252 tended to ameliorate the indices, but the difference was not statistically significant. The results document a role of the ET system, specifically of ETA receptors, in the development of progressive renal injury in salt-loaded UNX-SHRsp. LU 135252 completely prevented death and renal damage resulting from salt loading.


American Journal of Kidney Diseases | 1997

Rats with moderate renal failure show capillary deficit in heart but not skeletal muscle

Kerstin Amann; Karl Albrecht Neimeier; Ute Schwarz; Johannes Törnig; Stephan Matthias; Stephan R. Orth; Gerhard Mall; Eberhard Ritz

In previous studies on experimental renal failure, hypertrophy of cardiomyocytes, diminished capillarization, and increased intercapillary distances had been observed, abnormalities that will expose the heart to reduced ischemia tolerance. It has not been established, however, whether such structural alterations are unique for the heart (eg, as a consequence of left ventricular hypertrophy) or are demonstrable in other tissues as well. Clarification of this point is important to test hypotheses on some potential mechanisms for cardiac undercapillarization. To address this issue further, we compared capillary length density (by stereologic techniques) in perfusion-fixed skeletal muscle (m. psoas) and hearts of subtotally nephrectomized (SNX) rats with moderate renal failure to those in sham-operated pair-fed controls. The duration of renal failure was 8 weeks. SNX rats had significantly higher mean systolic blood pressure (128 mm Hg v 109 mm Hg), serum creatinine, and urea levels. Despite pair feeding, the mean body weight was significantly lower in the SNX rats (409 g v 471 g), but the left ventricular weight to body weight ratio tended to be higher than in the sham-operated controls (2.39 mg/g v 2.13 mg/g). In the heart, myocyte mean cross-sectional area (675 +/- 112 microm2 v 545 +/- 111 microm2) and volume density of nonvascular interstitial tissue (3.47 +/- 1.04 v 1.33 +/- 0.22) were significantly higher in the SNX rats than in the controls. In parallel, myocardial capillary length density was significantly reduced after subtotal nephrectomy (3,036 +/- 535 mm/mm3 v 3,916 +/- 615 mm/mm3). In contrast, in skeletal muscle, myocyte cross-sectional area (3,109 +/- 783 microm2 v 3,042 +/- 639 microm2), capillary length density (718 +/- 248 mm/mm3 v 717 +/- 184 mm/mm3), and three-dimensional capillary fiber ratio (2.10 +/- 0.26 v 2.13 +/- 0.4) were similar in SNX and control rats. These data document a selective defect of capillarization in the heart of animals with moderate renal failure, pointing to tissue-specific abnormalities of cardiac capillarogenesis.


Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2000

Morphology of coronary atherosclerotic lesions in patients with end-stage renal failure

Ute Schwarz; Moriz Buzello; Eberhard Ritz; Günter Stein; Gerd Raabe; Gabriele Wiest; Gerhard Mall; Kerstin Amann


Kidney International | 1998

Effect of 1,25(OH)2 vitamin D3 on glomerulosclerosis in subtotally nephrectomized rats

Ute Schwarz; Kerstin Amann; Stephan R. Orth; Aureliza Simonaviciene; Sabine Wessels; Eberhard Ritz


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2004

1,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D3 decreases podocyte loss and podocyte hypertrophy in the subtotally nephrectomized rat

Alexander Kuhlmann; Christian S. Haas; Marie-Luise Gross; Udo Reulbach; Marc Holzinger; Ute Schwarz; Eberhard Ritz; Kerstin Amann


Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 1996

Effect of ramipril, nifedipine, and moxonidine on glomerular morphology and podocyte structure in experimental renal failure

Kerstin Amann; C. Nichols; J. Törnig; Ute Schwarz; Martin Zeier; Gerhard Mall; Eberhard Ritz


Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 1998

The renoprotective effect of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors in experimental chronic renal failure is not dependent on enhanced kinin activity

Alexander Nabokov; Kerstin Amann; Peter Gassmann; Ute Schwarz; Stephan R. Orth; Eberhard Ritz


Kidney International | 1996

Hypertension and left ventricular hypertrophy in the CAPD patient.

Kerstin Amann; Mandelbaum A; Ute Schwarz; Ritz E


Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 1999

Why are coronary plaques more malignant in the uraemic patient

Ute Schwarz; Kerstin Amann; Eberhard Ritz

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Alexander Kuhlmann

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Christian S. Haas

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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