Kohagura Kentaro, Zamami Ryo, Oshiro Nanako, Shinzato Yuki, Uesugi Noriko
Dialysis Unit, University of the Ryukyus Hospital, Okinawa, Japan.
Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Nephrology and Neurology Faculty of Medicine, University of the Ryukyus, Okinawa, Japan.
Hypertens Res. 2024 Dec;47(12):3383-3396. doi: 10.1038/s41440-024-01916-z. Epub 2024 Oct 8.
Hypertension, aging, and other factors are associated with arteriosclerosis and arteriolosclerosis, primary morphological features of nephrosclerosis. Although such pathological changes are not invariably linked with renal decline but are prevalent across chronic kidney disease (CKD), understanding kidney damage progression is more pragmatic than precisely diagnosing nephrosclerosis itself. Hyalinosis and medial thickening of the afferent arteriole, along with intimal thickening of small arteries, can disrupt the autoregulatory system, jeopardizing glomerular perfusion pressure given systemic blood pressure (BP) fluctuations. Consequently, such vascular lesions cause glomerular damage by inducing glomerular hypertension and ischemia at the single nephron level. Thus, the interaction between systemic BP and afferent arteriolopathy markedly influences BP-dependent renal damage progression in nephrosclerosis. Both dilated and narrowed types of afferent arteriolopathy coexist throughout the kidney, with varying proportions among patients. Therefore, optimizing antihypertensive therapy to target either glomerular hypertension or ischemia is imperative. In recent years, clinical trials have indicated that combining renin-angiotensin system inhibitors (RASis) and sodium-glucose transporter 2 inhibitors (SGLT2is) is superior to using RASis alone in slowing renal function decline, despite comparable reductions in albuminuria. The superior efficacy of SGLT2is may arise from their beneficial effects on both glomerular hypertension and renal ischemia. A comprehensive understanding of the interaction between systemic BP and heterogeneous afferent arteriolopathy is pivotal for optimizing therapy and mitigating renal decline in patients with CKD of any etiology. Therefore, in this comprehensive review, we explore the role of afferent arteriolopathy in BP-dependent renal damage.
高血压、衰老和其他因素与动脉硬化和小动脉硬化有关,这是肾硬化的主要形态学特征。尽管这些病理变化并非总是与肾功能下降相关,但在慢性肾脏病(CKD)中普遍存在,了解肾脏损害的进展比精确诊断肾硬化本身更为实际。入球小动脉的玻璃样变性和中层增厚,以及小动脉内膜增厚,会破坏自动调节系统,在全身血压(BP)波动时危及肾小球灌注压。因此,这种血管病变通过在单个肾单位水平诱导肾小球高压和缺血而导致肾小球损伤。因此,全身血压与入球小动脉病变之间的相互作用显著影响肾硬化中依赖血压的肾脏损害进展。入球小动脉病变的扩张型和狭窄型在整个肾脏中并存,患者之间的比例各不相同。因此,优化抗高血压治疗以针对肾小球高压或缺血至关重要。近年来,临床试验表明,尽管蛋白尿减少程度相当,但联合使用肾素-血管紧张素系统抑制剂(RASis)和钠-葡萄糖转运蛋白2抑制剂(SGLT2is)在减缓肾功能下降方面优于单独使用RASis。SGLT2is的卓越疗效可能源于它们对肾小球高压和肾脏缺血的有益作用。全面了解全身血压与异质性入球小动脉病变之间的相互作用对于优化治疗和减轻任何病因的CKD患者的肾功能下降至关重要。因此,在这篇综述中,我们探讨了入球小动脉病变在依赖血压的肾脏损害中的作用。