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MON-692 Effect of High Salt Diet on Kidney Weight in Neonatal Streptozotocin Induced Noninsulin Dependent Diabetic Rats

Diabetic kidney hypertrophy may contribute to the development of diabetic kidney disease. Hyperglycemia is recognized as a cause for the kidney endangerment. Salt may accelerate progression of kidney disease in diabetes. To further study the effect of high salt intake on kidney disease we used neona...

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Autores principales: Safta, Loren, Levy-Basso, Shiri, Levy, Joseph
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7209169/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.432
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author Safta, Loren
Levy-Basso, Shiri
Levy, Joseph
author_facet Safta, Loren
Levy-Basso, Shiri
Levy, Joseph
author_sort Safta, Loren
collection PubMed
description Diabetic kidney hypertrophy may contribute to the development of diabetic kidney disease. Hyperglycemia is recognized as a cause for the kidney endangerment. Salt may accelerate progression of kidney disease in diabetes. To further study the effect of high salt intake on kidney disease we used neonatal streptozotocin induced Noninsulin Dependent Diabetic (NIDD) rats fed ad libitum with regular Purina chow and 2% salt Purina chow. Rats in 5 groups were sacrificed at 6 weeks. Each group had 5–7 rats of diabetics on 2% salt and on regular chow and controls on 2% salt and on regular chow. Blood glucose in diabetics on salt ranged between 185±19–576±20 and in diabetics on regular chow 184±20–458±78 mg/dl. Controls on 2% salt 105±8.6–133±10.3 and controls on regular chow 110±8.9 - 130±3.11. Kidney weights in diabetics on salt was 1.85±0.09–2.0±0.06 gr, diabetics on regular chow 1.6±0.04 - 1.56±0.06 controls on salt 1.19±0.03–1.32±0.05 and controls on regular chow 1.23±0.03. Blood glucose in diabetics on salt and on regular chow was higher than in controls p˂0.05 but did not differ between the diabetic groups. Kidney weight was increased in both diabetic groups compared with controls p˂0.05 and was increased in diabetics on salt compared with diabetics on regular chow p˂0.05 at all glucose levels. Controls on salt and on regular chow had similar kidney weights. Also kidney weight relative to body weight was higher in diabetics than in controls p˂0.05 and was higher in diabetics on salt compared to diabetics on regular chow p˂0.05, but there was no difference between controls on salt and controls on regular diet. Kidney % of water was similar in all four groups but protein to kidney DNA ratio was higher in the diabetic groups p˂0.05 confirming the kidney hypertrophy. Insulin sensitivity measured in controls was not different between groups when glucose transport, glucose oxidation and lipogenesis were measured in fat cells showing no effect of salt on insulin sensitivity. We suggest that high salt intake is an additional risk factor for increased kidney weight in NIDDM that is additive to that of the prevailing glycemia.
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spelling pubmed-72091692020-05-13 MON-692 Effect of High Salt Diet on Kidney Weight in Neonatal Streptozotocin Induced Noninsulin Dependent Diabetic Rats Safta, Loren Levy-Basso, Shiri Levy, Joseph J Endocr Soc Diabetes Mellitus and Glucose Metabolism Diabetic kidney hypertrophy may contribute to the development of diabetic kidney disease. Hyperglycemia is recognized as a cause for the kidney endangerment. Salt may accelerate progression of kidney disease in diabetes. To further study the effect of high salt intake on kidney disease we used neonatal streptozotocin induced Noninsulin Dependent Diabetic (NIDD) rats fed ad libitum with regular Purina chow and 2% salt Purina chow. Rats in 5 groups were sacrificed at 6 weeks. Each group had 5–7 rats of diabetics on 2% salt and on regular chow and controls on 2% salt and on regular chow. Blood glucose in diabetics on salt ranged between 185±19–576±20 and in diabetics on regular chow 184±20–458±78 mg/dl. Controls on 2% salt 105±8.6–133±10.3 and controls on regular chow 110±8.9 - 130±3.11. Kidney weights in diabetics on salt was 1.85±0.09–2.0±0.06 gr, diabetics on regular chow 1.6±0.04 - 1.56±0.06 controls on salt 1.19±0.03–1.32±0.05 and controls on regular chow 1.23±0.03. Blood glucose in diabetics on salt and on regular chow was higher than in controls p˂0.05 but did not differ between the diabetic groups. Kidney weight was increased in both diabetic groups compared with controls p˂0.05 and was increased in diabetics on salt compared with diabetics on regular chow p˂0.05 at all glucose levels. Controls on salt and on regular chow had similar kidney weights. Also kidney weight relative to body weight was higher in diabetics than in controls p˂0.05 and was higher in diabetics on salt compared to diabetics on regular chow p˂0.05, but there was no difference between controls on salt and controls on regular diet. Kidney % of water was similar in all four groups but protein to kidney DNA ratio was higher in the diabetic groups p˂0.05 confirming the kidney hypertrophy. Insulin sensitivity measured in controls was not different between groups when glucose transport, glucose oxidation and lipogenesis were measured in fat cells showing no effect of salt on insulin sensitivity. We suggest that high salt intake is an additional risk factor for increased kidney weight in NIDDM that is additive to that of the prevailing glycemia. Oxford University Press 2020-05-08 /pmc/articles/PMC7209169/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.432 Text en © Endocrine Society 2020. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Diabetes Mellitus and Glucose Metabolism
Safta, Loren
Levy-Basso, Shiri
Levy, Joseph
MON-692 Effect of High Salt Diet on Kidney Weight in Neonatal Streptozotocin Induced Noninsulin Dependent Diabetic Rats
title MON-692 Effect of High Salt Diet on Kidney Weight in Neonatal Streptozotocin Induced Noninsulin Dependent Diabetic Rats
title_full MON-692 Effect of High Salt Diet on Kidney Weight in Neonatal Streptozotocin Induced Noninsulin Dependent Diabetic Rats
title_fullStr MON-692 Effect of High Salt Diet on Kidney Weight in Neonatal Streptozotocin Induced Noninsulin Dependent Diabetic Rats
title_full_unstemmed MON-692 Effect of High Salt Diet on Kidney Weight in Neonatal Streptozotocin Induced Noninsulin Dependent Diabetic Rats
title_short MON-692 Effect of High Salt Diet on Kidney Weight in Neonatal Streptozotocin Induced Noninsulin Dependent Diabetic Rats
title_sort mon-692 effect of high salt diet on kidney weight in neonatal streptozotocin induced noninsulin dependent diabetic rats
topic Diabetes Mellitus and Glucose Metabolism
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7209169/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.432
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