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Ann Thorac Surg 2006;82:1488
© 2006 The Society of Thoracic Surgeons
Department of Anesthesiology, Duke University Medical Center, Box 3094 DUMC, Durham, NC 27710
(Email: staff002{at}mc.duke.edu).
A recent publication of conclusions from the Second International Consensus Conference of the Acute Dialysis Quality Initiative (ADQI) Group includes a review of the 12 leading acute renal failure animal models [1]. Notably, a single renal insult from ischemia, toxins, or inflammation characterizes almost all of these models, and none involve cardiopulmonary bypass. The same authors acknowledge the disappointing and sometimes misleading contribution of these animal models to the investigation of human acute renal injury and renal protection in the critically ill, including cardiac surgical patients.
In this context, new acute renal injury models involving multiple sources of insult, including bypass, are particularly interesting [2], including most recently that by Singal and colleagues [3]. The hope is that these models may resemble more closely the multiple sources and variable infliction of insults already known to characterize the pathophysiology of cardiac surgeryrelated acute renal dysfunction and that this new methodology may improve the value of animal models in the search for useful human interventions. Notably, these new bypass models may be even more relevant when aging or baseline renal-impaired animals are subjected to similar conditions.
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