Journal of the American Society of Nephrology : JASN
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J. Am. Soc. Nephrol. · Apr 1994
Pair-tested renal reserve filtration capacity in kidney recipients and their donors.
Subjects after kidney donation manifest an adaptive rise in GFR. In uninephrectomized rats, progressive glomerulosclerosis, which is induced by the compensatory glomerular hyperfiltration, develops. It has been assumed that testing the existence of renal reserve filtration capacity (RRFC) might be used to demonstrate such glomerular hyperfiltration in humans. ⋯ Likewise, the RRFC tested with the amino acids of the recipients was similar to that of the donors before kidney donation. In contrast, in kidney recipients and donors, both short and long term after donation, RRFC tested with dopamine was approximately halved compared with that of the donors before donation. It was concluded, first, that testing RRFC cannot be used to test the existence of maladaptive glomerular hyperfiltration in subjects with a single kidney: Second, GFR increases for years after kidney donation, probably because of the compensatory hypertrophy of the remaining kidney.