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      Update on ischemia-reperfusion injury in kidney transplantation: Pathogenesis and treatment.

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          Abstract

          Ischemia/reperfusion injury is an unavoidable relevant consequence after kidney transplantation and influences short term as well as long-term graft outcome. Clinically ischemia/reperfusion injury is associated with delayed graft function, graft rejection, chronic rejection and chronic graft dysfunction. Ischemia/reperfusion affects many regulatory systems at the cellular level as well as in the renal tissue that result in a distinct inflammatory reaction of the kidney graft. Underlying factors of ischemia reperfusion include energy metabolism, cellular changes of the mitochondria and cellular membranes, initiation of different forms of cell death-like apoptosis and necrosis together with a recently discovered mixed form termed necroptosis. Chemokines and cytokines together with other factors promote the inflammatory response leading to activation of the innate immune system as well as the adaptive immune system. If the inflammatory reaction continues within the graft tissue, a progressive interstitial fibrosis develops that impacts long-term graft outcome. It is of particular importance in kidney transplantation to understand the underlying mechanisms and effects of ischemia/reperfusion on the graft as this knowledge also opens strategies to prevent or treat ischemia/reperfusion injury after transplantation in order to improve graft outcome.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          World J Transplant
          World journal of transplantation
          2220-3230
          Jun 24 2015
          : 5
          : 2
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Maurizio Salvadori, Elisabetta Bertoni, Department of Renal Transplantation, Careggi University Hospital, 50139 Florence, Italy.
          Article
          10.5500/wjt.v5.i2.52
          4478600
          26131407
          751f99a1-acd1-471a-82da-6d81ceef8b3e
          History

          Acute kidney injury,Anti-inflammatory strategies,Delayed graft function,Inflammatory response,Innate and adaptive immune response,Ischemia-reperfusion

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