What is it about?
Acute Kidney Injury (AKI) is a common and serious condition with no specific treatment. AKI has been estimated to cost the NHS in the UK alone between £451-626 million per year. We have developed a clinically-relevant, translational animal (porcine) model of AKI in order to test potential new treatments for AKI, to understand what causes the cellular damage in AKI and finally, to work out how best to help recover optimal kidney function if the damage to the kdiney was unavoidable
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Why is it important?
Recovery from a single episode of AKI is known to increase risk of being diagnosed with chronic kidney disease later in life. Many patients that recover from AKI also appear to be a greater risk of developing organ malfunction in organs distant or ‘remote’ to the kidney, such as the lung or liver. Why acute damage to the kidney may affect other organs is not known. Currently, it is thought that other organs may become infiltrated with inflammatory cells released from the kidney, which go on to affect these other organs function.
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This page is a summary of: Remote effects of acute kidney injury in a porcine model, AJP Renal Physiology, November 2015, American Physiological Society,
DOI: 10.1152/ajprenal.00389.2015.
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