Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4255734 Transplantation Proceedings 2013 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundDamage provoked by ischemia in renal transplants is difficult to quantify. To determine whether a donated organ is fit for transplantation. We sought to correlate the findings of fluorescence spectroscopy (FS) with histologic evidence of ischemic injury and organ viability.MethodsKidneys of 33 rats were submitted to FS of the upper and lower poles as well as the middle third. Excitation was generated by the laser's wavelengths of 408, 442, and 532 nm. Rats were randomized into groups with the 30, 60, and 120 minutes warm ischemia before analysis by FS, that was repeated at 5 minutes after reperfusion.ResultsFS results in the reperfusion phase correlated with ischemia time and degree of histologic injury. After 60 or 120 minutes of ischemia, the excitation lasers of 532 and 442 nm resented a significant negative correlation coefficient with the histological grade (r = −0.61 and r = −0.73, respectively).ConclusionsThere was a strong correlation between FS and histologic changes only in the reperfusion phase after renal ischemia. The method was thus unable to assess the viability of organs before transplantation.

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