Acute kidney injury is common and associated with negative renal and patient outcomes. The human kidney has a real but limited regeneration capacity. Understanding renal regeneration may allow us to manipulate this process and thus develop therapeutic weapons to improve patients' outcome. In the first part of this paper we discuss the clinical factors associated with renal recovery: baseline patient particularities, acute kidney injury characteristics and the medical approach taken in the short and long-term. In the second part, the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying renal regeneration are explored. The immune system seems to have an important role, first promoting inflammation and then tissue healing. Other players, such as cellu...
Human kidney is particularly susceptible to ischemia and toxins with consequential tubular necrosis ...
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: To briefly show which are the mechanisms and cell types involved in kidney regene...
Deterioration of renal function is typically slow but progressive, and therefore renal disease is of...
Acute kidney injury (AKI) is still associated with high morbidity and mortality incidence rates, and...
The kidneys play a vital role in the basic physiological functions of the body. Kidney dysfunction i...
Human kidney is particularly susceptible to ischemia and toxins with consequential tubular necrosis ...
With well over 700 000 deaths every year worldwide, kidney disease constitutes an immense health pro...
Abstract The adult mammalian renal tubular epithelium exists in a relatively quiescent to slowly re...
Regenerative medicine was initially focused on tissue engineering to replace damaged tissues and org...
Deterioration of renal function is typically slow but progressive, and therefore renal disease is of...
Deterioration of renal function is typically slow but progressive, and therefore renal disease is of...
Deterioration of renal function is typically slow but progressive, and therefore renal disease is of...
Deterioration of renal function is typically slow but progressive, and therefore renal disease is of...
Background: The most common intrarenal cause for acute kidney injury/renal failure is tubular damage...
Deterioration of renal function is typically slow but progressive, and therefore renal disease is of...
Human kidney is particularly susceptible to ischemia and toxins with consequential tubular necrosis ...
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: To briefly show which are the mechanisms and cell types involved in kidney regene...
Deterioration of renal function is typically slow but progressive, and therefore renal disease is of...
Acute kidney injury (AKI) is still associated with high morbidity and mortality incidence rates, and...
The kidneys play a vital role in the basic physiological functions of the body. Kidney dysfunction i...
Human kidney is particularly susceptible to ischemia and toxins with consequential tubular necrosis ...
With well over 700 000 deaths every year worldwide, kidney disease constitutes an immense health pro...
Abstract The adult mammalian renal tubular epithelium exists in a relatively quiescent to slowly re...
Regenerative medicine was initially focused on tissue engineering to replace damaged tissues and org...
Deterioration of renal function is typically slow but progressive, and therefore renal disease is of...
Deterioration of renal function is typically slow but progressive, and therefore renal disease is of...
Deterioration of renal function is typically slow but progressive, and therefore renal disease is of...
Deterioration of renal function is typically slow but progressive, and therefore renal disease is of...
Background: The most common intrarenal cause for acute kidney injury/renal failure is tubular damage...
Deterioration of renal function is typically slow but progressive, and therefore renal disease is of...
Human kidney is particularly susceptible to ischemia and toxins with consequential tubular necrosis ...
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: To briefly show which are the mechanisms and cell types involved in kidney regene...
Deterioration of renal function is typically slow but progressive, and therefore renal disease is of...