BSCI 441: Mammalian Physiology Laboratory
 
 
 
 
 
Last Updated:01/14/04
 

Lab 5: Evaluation of Renal Function

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Evaluation of Renal Function:

Removal of Phenol Red from the Circulation

Introduction

     Renal function is dependent upon blood flow, glomerular blood flow, glomerular filtration rate, etc.  It is usually evaluated by measuring the renal clearance of substances from the plasma.  This requires collection of arterial and venous blood and urine samples.  This is not possible in our experimental animals (rats) due to their small blood volume and their relatively low rate of urine formation.

     You will employ a different approach to examine renal function.  You will monitor the removal of phenol red, a substance that is filtered and secreted with an Extraction Ratio of approximately 0.67, from the plasma by measuring the amount remaining in the plasma over a 30 minute post-injection period.  You will then repeat the procedure after treating the animal with exogenous agents that may or may not be expected to alter the rate of removal.  These agents of interest will alter systemic blood pressure, cardiac output, renal blood flow and pressure, blood volume, plasma ion concentrations, and/or plasma osmotic pressure.

Experimental Procedures

    Animal preparation - Following the protocols and methods described in previous exercises, anesthetize an animal with urethane and cannulate the trachea, carotid artery, and jugular vein.

    Connect the jugular cannula to a 1 cc syringe as usual that will later be used to inject the phenol red. You also might choose to use a somewhat shorter piece of tubing for carotid cannulation since you will have to withdraw blood samples through this piece of tubing and longer pieces make for greater difficulty in withdrawing the blood (greater L = greater R!!!!)

    Taking blood samples - Remove a 0.5 ml blood sample from the carotid cannula into a syringe containing 0.3 ml of heparinized saline attached to the blood pressure transducer (Remember to turn the stopcock off to the transducer prior to attempting to withdraw the blood sample). You might choose to remove the blood directly into the 1 cc syringe containing 3 cc of heparinized saline. Mix the sample gently and centrifuge at speed 4 in the microcentrifuge for 3 min. in order to pellet out the red blood cells.  Take 0.4 ml of the supernatant (top layer of liquid which=plasma and heparinized saline) using an automatic pipet with small tip and dilute it with 2.5 ml of distilled water.  Save this sample as your spectrophotometric "blank" (see below). As soon as you have withdrawn this blood sample and all future samples, flush the cannula with 0.5 ml heparinized saline. (Why should you do this ?)

    Now, inject 1.0 ml of a 7.5 mg/ ml phenol red solution into the jugular vein.  Quickly flush the cannula with 0.5 ml of heparinized saline.  Exactly 3.0 min after flushing the cannula, withdraw 0.5 ml (This volume is critical, it must be the same throughout the experiment!!!) of blood into a syringe containing 0.3 ml of heparinized saline. Rinse the cannula with 0.5 ml heparinized saline. Again, gently mix the withdrawn blood with the heparinized saline, centrifuge, and dilute 0.4 ml of the supernatant with 2.5 ml of dH2O.  Label this sample as TIME 0 and set it aside.

    Repeat this procedure at  5, 10, 20 and 30 min after this first withdrawal.  Also be careful to note any changes in BP, HR, or other variable during the course of the experiment.

    Experimental agents - You may now be supplied with a solution containing an agent that may be expected to alter blood pressure or flow (What agents might you choose?). You will be instructed in the use of an infusion pump. The infusion pump provides a steady, continuous dose of the drug at extremely slow flow rates. (Why is a continuous dose at a very low flow rate necessary?) Set up the infusion pump with the agent of choice and continuously monitor the rat's BP using the blood pressure transducer set-up. Inject 1.0 ml of phenol red. Withdraw blood samples at the correct times as described above.  Be certain to monitor BP, HR, and respiration during the course of the experiment! Remember that you must turn the stopcock on the blood pressure transducer "off" to the transducer when you withdraw blood samples.

    But wait, we may be removing a portion of the rat's blood volume. Might this have an effect on kidney function and renal clearance in addition to the effects of the experimental agent?? Can you think of a way to deal with this problem? In other words, we need to consider some appropriate "controls". You can assign different lab groups to different parts of the experiment if you wish.
 

    Spectrophotometric determination or [phenol red] - After collecting all of your blood samples, you must quantify the amount of phenol red found in the plasma at each time point.  Your laboratory instructor will provide an absorption spectrum for phenol red as well as the phenol red stock solution. Each lab (this means one group can perform this for the entire lab with the gratitude of the entire lab of course) must construct a phenol red standard curve using phenol red concentrations from 0.001 mg/ ml to 0.075mg/ ml. This will enable you to correlate phenol red samples of KNOWN CONCENTRATION with their absorbencies read from the spectrophotometer. You will then be able to determine the concentration of phenol red in your experimental samples by comparing each of their absorbencies read from the spec, with the standard curve.

    Use your pre-phenol red injection sample as the "blank" and zero the spectrophotometer.  Now record the absorbency of the other samples.  Using the extinction coefficient (the slope) of the standard curve, calculate the [phenol red] in the blood samples.  Some easy calculations will yield the [phenol red] in the blood at various times.

    Data analysis - You will now construct a plot of [phenol red] in the blood vs. time (0 to 30 min) without and with the drug. Compare the rates of removal and explain and discuss any differences induced by the exogenous agent. Remember to consider the results of the "control" experiments.



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