Sodium magnetic resonance imaging of diuresis: spatial and kinetic response

Nimrod Maril, Raanan Margalit, Joel Mispelter, Hadassa Degani, Nimrod Maril, Raanan Margalit, Joel Mispelter, Hadassa Degani

Abstract

Renal function is highly correlated with the sodium concentration gradient along the corticomedullary axis. The application of 3D high-resolution sodium magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) provided a means to quantify in vivo the spatial and temporal changes in renal tissue sodium concentration under normal and diuretic conditions. A detailed, pixel-by-pixel analysis of the intact rat kidney sodium MR images yielded a quantitative measure of the corticomedullary sodium gradient before and at early and later times after the administration of two distinct diuretic agents, furosemide and mannitol. Furosemide, a loop diuretic, induced a fivefold reduction in the cortical-outer medullary sodium gradient, whereas mannitol, an osmotic diuretic, did not affect this gradient. Both diuretics induced a 50% decrease in the sodium concentration of the inner medulla; however, mannitol exerted its effect twice as fast as furosemide with a 2.5-min exponential decay constant. These specific changes were attributed to the different mechanism of action and site of activity of each diuretic agent. Thus, high-resolution (23)Na MRI offers a unique, noninvasive tool for functional imaging of the kidney physiology.

(c) 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

Source: PubMed

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