Assessment of real‐time and quantitative changes in renal hemodynamics in healthy overweight males: contrast‐enhanced ultrasonography versus para‐aminohippuric acid clearance

2019 
Objective: To determine the ability of renal contrast-enhanced ultrasonography (CEUS) to detect acute drug-induced changes in renal perfusion (using the glucagon-like peptide (GLP)-1 receptor agonist exenatide and nitric oxide [NO]-synthase inhibitor L-NG-monomethyl arginine [l-NMMA]), and assess its correlation with gold standard-measured effective renal plasma flow in humans. Methods: In this prespecified exploratory analysis of a placebo-controlled cross-over study, renal hemodynamics was assessed in 10 healthy overweight males (aged 20-27 years; BMI 26-31 kg/m2) over two separate testing days; during placebo (isotonic saline) and subsequent exenatide infusion (Day-A), and during l-NMMA, and subsequent exenatide plus l-NMMA infusion (Day-B). Renal cortical microvascular blood flow was estimated following microbubble infusion and CEUS destruction-refilling-sequences. Renal cortical microvascular blood flow was compared with simultaneously measured effective renal plasma flow in humans, derived from para-aminohippuric acid-clearance methodology. Results: On Day-A, effective renal plasma flow increased by 68 [26-197] mL/min/1.73 m2 during exenatide vs placebo infusion (+17%; P =.015). In parallel, exenatide increased renal cortical microvascular blood flow, from 2.42 × 10−4 [6.54 × 10−5-4.66 × 10−4] AU to 4.65 × 10−4 [2.96 × 10−4-7.74 × 10−4] AU (+92%; P =.027). On Day-B, effective renal plasma flow and renal cortical microvascular blood flow were reduced by l-NMMA, with no significant effect of concomitant exenatide on renal hemodynamic-indices assessed by either technique. Effective renal plasma flow correlated with renal cortical microvascular blood flow on Day-A (r =.533; P =.027); no correlation was found on Day-B. Conclusions: Contrast-enhanced ultrasonography can detect acute drug-induced changes human renal hemodynamics. CEUS-assessed renal cortical microvascular blood flow moderately associates with effective renal plasma flow, particularly when perfusion is in normal-to-high range. Renal CEUS cannot replace effective renal plasma flow measurements, but may be a complementary tool to characterize regional kidney perfusion.
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