Significance of blood urea nitrogen as an index of renal function in mice infected withPlasmodium berghei
1989
Parameters of renal function were evaluated in severe malarial infection, using mice infected withPlasmodium berghei. When 7-week-old male BALB/c mice were inoculated with 1×107P. berghei NK65-infected red blood cells, the rodents died an average of 7.4 days after inoculation. Anemia developed on day 5 after inoculation and progressed markedly on days 6 and 7. Plasma urea nitrogen increased rapidly on day 6 or 7, after which death occurred within 24 h. In contrast, urinary urea nitrogen excretion decreased on the same day. Urinary β-N-acetyl-d-glucosaminidase (NAG) activity increased from day 3 to day 5, then decreased to normal levels on day 7. Renal ATP concentration and energy charge decreased markedly on day 7. These data indicate that the blood oxygen supply to the tissues began to decrease on day 6 and that renal insufficiency developed in the terminal stage of infection. We concluded that even a moderate increase in the level of plasma urea nitrogen could be a useful index of renal insufficiency in this infection system.
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