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Regeneration and the kidney

Current Opinion in Nephrology and Hypertension, 2010
Following any injury, various intracellular and intercellular pathways must be activated and coordinated if tissue integrity and homeostasis need to be restored. In most injuries, repair results in once-functional tissue becoming a patch of cells and disorganized extracellular matrix that is referred to as a scar. However, most adult organs of the body,
LAZZERI, ELENA   +2 more
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Is the Solitary Kidney a Privileged Kidney?

British Journal of Urology, 1983
Summary— In rabbits the renal function of solitary kidneys subjected to ischaemic damage was compared with that of kidneys damaged identically in the presence of a normal contralateral organ.In spite of compensatory hypertrophy of the solitary kidney, no improvement in its tolerance to ischaemia was observed.The solitary kidney is thus not a privileged
Michael Marberger, E. Hofmann, W. Stackl
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The Artificial Kidney [PDF]

open access: possibleArchives of Internal Medicine, 1952
The first so-called "artificial kidney" used in this country was an ingenious device containing a collodion membrane as the filter and hirudin, the active anticoagulant principle of the leech, to prevent blood clotting. It was used in experiments to remove salicylate from the blood of dogs by extracorporeal circulation.1Almost 50 years later the same ...
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The kidney

2013
Kidney dysfunction is common in patients with rheumatological disease, be it secondary to renal (usually glomerular) involvement by a multisystem rheumatological disorder, renal impairment due to nephrotoxic medication use, or incidentally noted during a rheumatological work-up.
Mark Little, Alan Salama
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Echinococcosis of the kidney

International Urology and Nephrology, 1984
A case of renal echinococcosis, most uncommon in Hungary, is reported. The problems of diagnosis and therapy are discussed. It is emphasized that difficulties of diagnosis, particularly differential diagnosis, arise mainly in countries where the incidence of echinococcosis is low.
S. Kottász, E. Korányi
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