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Am J Physiol Renal Physiol 249: F374-F389, 1985;
0363-6127/85 $5.00
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AJP - Renal Physiology, Vol 249, Issue 3 374-F389, Copyright © 1985 by American Physiological Society


ARTICLES

Heteroporous model of glomerular size selectivity: application to normal and nephrotic humans

W. M. Deen, C. R. Bridges, B. M. Brenner and B. D. Myers

A heteroporous model of the glomerular filtration barrier was developed and used to interpret dextransieving data in healthy volunteers (normal controls), in patients with nephrotic range proteinuria (grouped as grades I-III, according to severity), and in a group of previously nephrotic patients whose proteinuria was in remission ("resolved controls"). Several hypothetical pore-size distributions were compared in terms of their ability to describe the selective increases in the fractional clearance of large dextrans observed with increasing severity of proteinuria. The most successful model examined was based on the assumption that the major portion of the capillary wall functions as an isoporous membrane, but that a small fraction of the filtrate passes through pores that are unable to discriminate among dextrans of different sizes. The value of the membrane parameter that reflects the relative importance of the nonselective pores was found to increase in parallel with the fractional clearance of immunoglobulin G; it increased progressively in going from normal controls to resolved controls to grades I-III nephrotics. The observed patterns of protein excretion could not, however, be explained entirely by a loss of glomerular size selectivity. Variations in membrane selectivity on the basis of molecular charge and/or molecular configuration are also likely to have been important.


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