Oxygen free radicals are generated during reperfusion of ischemic organs. Studies employing several species of laboratory animal (rat, dog, pig, rabbit, mouse) have documented protective effects of a variety of free-radical scavengers and antioxidants when administered before or immediately preceding reperfusion of ischemic kidneys. These protective agents include superoxide dismutase, dimethylthiorea, dimethyl sulfoxide, alpha-tocopherol, glutathione, the iron chelator deferoxamine, probucol, allopurinol and oxypurinol, and the spin-trapping agent PBN. Furthermore, deficiency of antioxidants (selenium, alpha-tocopherol, or catalase) exacerbates postischemic renal injury. These findings have been applied to renal transplantation in an attempt to decrease the incidence of posttransplantation acute renal failure. This is important because acute renal failure results in morbidity, increases hospital stay and the cost of transplantation, and complicates the use of cyclosporine. In porcine and in canine kidney transplantation, superoxide dismutase and allopurinol have provided renal protection. Transplantation is complicated because there may be prolonged hypoperfusion before harvesting plus a brief period of total ischemia during harvesting, followed by a prolonged period of cold ischemia and/or reperfusion, then followed by another brief period of ischemia and reperfusion during transplantation. Injury may occur at each of these phases by different mechanisms.
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