Publication | Open Access
Renal sensory and sympathetic nerves reinnervate the kidney in a similar time-dependent fashion after renal denervation in rats
136
Citations
53
References
2013
Year
Renal InflammationSocial SciencesSubstance PRenal FunctionRenal Sympathetic NervesSympathetic Nervous SystemChronic Kidney DiseaseRenal PharmacologyRenal PathophysiologyNervous SystemRenal SensoryUrologyNeurophysiologyPhysiologySympathetic NervesRenal DenervationSubstance P-irNeuroscienceMedicineNephrologyKidney Research
Efferent renal sympathetic nerves regrow after denervation, yet the extent and timing of afferent sensory reinnervation remain poorly understood. The study examined the temporal pattern of sympathetic and sensory nerve reinnervation in Sprague‑Dawley rats following renal denervation. Optical density of NPY, TH, substance P, and CGRP‑positive fibers was quantified by immunohistochemistry in both innervated and contralateral denervated kidneys at multiple time points. Sensory and sympathetic reinnervation progressed at identical rates, reaching full restoration by 9–12 weeks, as shown by comparable optical densities and regression analyses (R² > 0.76).
Efferent renal sympathetic nerves reinnervate the kidney after renal denervation in animals and humans. Therefore, the long-term reduction in arterial pressure following renal denervation in drug-resistant hypertensive patients has been attributed to lack of afferent renal sensory reinnervation. However, afferent sensory reinnervation of any organ, including the kidney, is an understudied question. Therefore, we analyzed the time course of sympathetic and sensory reinnervation at multiple time points (1, 4, and 5 days and 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 9, and 12 wk) after renal denervation in normal Sprague-Dawley rats. Sympathetic and sensory innervation in the innervated and contralateral denervated kidney was determined as optical density (ImageJ) of the sympathetic and sensory nerves identified by immunohistochemistry using antibodies against markers for sympathetic nerves [neuropeptide Y (NPY) and tyrosine hydroxylase (TH)] and sensory nerves [substance P and calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP)]. In denervated kidneys, the optical density of NPY-immunoreactive (ir) fibers in the renal cortex and substance P-ir fibers in the pelvic wall was 6, 39, and 100% and 8, 47, and 100%, respectively, of that in the contralateral innervated kidney at 4 days, 4 wk, and 12 wk after denervation. Linear regression analysis of the optical density of the ratio of the denervated/innervated kidney versus time yielded similar intercept and slope values for NPY-ir, TH-ir, substance P-ir, and CGRP-ir fibers (all R(2) > 0.76). In conclusion, in normotensive rats, reinnervation of the renal sensory nerves occurs over the same time course as reinnervation of the renal sympathetic nerves, both being complete at 9 to 12 wk following renal denervation.
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