Jean-Marc Ide1, Nathalie Fretellier1,
Sylviane Guerret2, Marie-Christine De Goltstein1, Anne
Dencausse1, Nicolas Poveda1, Claire Hollenbeck1,
Walter Gonzalez1, Ccile Factor1, Claire Corot1
1Research, Guerbet, Roissy-Charles de
Gaulle cedex, France; 2Novotec, Lyon, France
Rats
with subtotal nephrectomy received a normal or high-phosphate diet and were
allocated to single injections of 2.5 mmol/kg of gadodiamide (Omniscan) or
saline for 5 consecutive days. Hyperphosphataemia enhanced histological
lesions (increase in dermal cellularity, abnormalities in dermal collagen
fibres and TGF-beta-1 immunostaining) and revealed macroscopic skin lesions.
In the gadodiamide + high phosphate diet group, the total plasma gadolinium
concentration was higher in the rats
with skin lesions than in the rats without lesions as well as the free
Gd3+ concentration.