Literature DB >> 14511965

Glomerular endotheliosis in normal pregnancy and pre-eclampsia.

Helena Strevens1, Dag Wide-Swensson, Alastair Hansen, Thomas Horn, Ingemar Ingemarsson, Svend Larsen, Julian Willner, Steen Olsen.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the proportion of women with findings characteristic for pre-eclampsia, as opposed to renal disease, in a controlled study of hypertensive pregnant women undergoing antepartum renal biopsy.
DESIGN: An observational prospective controlled study.
SETTING: University Hospital of Lund, Sweden. SAMPLE: Thirty-six previously healthy women with hypertensive disease in pregnancy, consecutively admitted to the antenatal ward at onset of disease during a 20 month period and giving informed consent, as well as 12 voluntary healthy pregnant controls.
METHODS: Renal biopsy samples were obtained from all participants and evaluated by light microscopy, electron microscopy and immunofluorescence techniques. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Presence and degree of glomerular endotheliosis.
RESULTS: Glomerular endotheliosis was present in all women with pre-eclampsia and gestational hypertension, and in 5 of the 12 controls, although significant differences in the degree of endotheliosis were found between the groups. Clinically undetected renal disease was not diagnosed in any of the women.
CONCLUSION: Glomerular endotheliosis was found in women with normal pregnancy as well as in both non-proteinuric and proteinuric hypertension and is consequently not, as earlier believed, pathognomonic for pre-eclampsia. The transition between normal term pregnancy, gestational hypertension and pre-eclampsia appears to be a continuous process, perhaps of increasing adaptation to pregnancy. Pre-eclampsia may be the extreme of the adaptational process, rather than a separate abnormal condition. Clinically undetected renal disease could be a rare cause of hypertension in pregnancy.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 14511965

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BJOG        ISSN: 1470-0328            Impact factor:   6.531


  32 in total

1.  Upregulation of sFlt-1 by trophoblasts induces the barrier dysfunction of glomerular endothelial cells.

Authors:  Jun Zhao; Haiyi Liu; Hui Du; Fuyuan Qiao; Yvqi Li; Xinwei Shi; Xun Gong; Yuanyuan Wu; Qiong Zhou; Jingjing Xu
Journal:  J Huazhong Univ Sci Technolog Med Sci       Date:  2011-12-16

2.  Recombinant vascular endothelial growth factor 121 attenuates autoantibody-induced features of pre-eclampsia in pregnant mice.

Authors:  Athar H Siddiqui; Roxanna A Irani; Yujin Zhang; Yingbo Dai; Sean C Blackwell; Susan M Ramin; Rodney E Kellems; Yang Xia
Journal:  Am J Hypertens       Date:  2010-12-23       Impact factor: 2.689

3.  Preeclampsia and the kidney: footprints in the urine.

Authors:  S Ananth Karumanchi; Marshall D Lindheimer
Journal:  Am J Obstet Gynecol       Date:  2007-04       Impact factor: 8.661

4.  The role of the podocyte in preeclampsia.

Authors:  Vesna D Garovic
Journal:  Clin J Am Soc Nephrol       Date:  2014-07-17       Impact factor: 8.237

5.  Effects of angiogenic factors, antagonists, and podocyte injury on development of proteinuria in preeclampsia.

Authors:  Guixiang Chen; Lihong Zhang; Xiaohong Jin; Yunjiao Zhou; Jianying Niu; Jing Chen; Yong Gu
Journal:  Reprod Sci       Date:  2012-09-18       Impact factor: 3.060

6.  Prediction and prevention of hypertensive disorders of pregnancy.

Authors:  Akihide Ohkuchi; Chikako Hirashima; Kayo Takahashi; Hirotada Suzuki; Shigeki Matsubara
Journal:  Hypertens Res       Date:  2016-08-18       Impact factor: 3.872

Review 7.  Proteinuria in preeclampsia from a podocyte injury perspective.

Authors:  Daniel E Henao; Moin A Saleem
Journal:  Curr Hypertens Rep       Date:  2013-12       Impact factor: 5.369

8.  Nested case-control study reveals increased levels of urinary proteins from human kidney toxicity panels in women predicted to develop preeclampsia.

Authors:  Yamile Lopez-Hernandez; Jorge Alejandro Saldivar-Nava; Idalia Garza-Veloz; Ivan Delgado-Enciso; Laura Elia Martinez-de-Villarreal; Patricia Yahuaca-Mendoza; Iram Pablo Rodriguez-Sanchez; Laura Lopez-Gilibets; Jorge Issac Galvan-Tejada; Carlos Eric Galvan-Tejada; Jose Maria Celaya-Padilla; Margarita L Martinez-Fierro
Journal:  Int Urol Nephrol       Date:  2016-08-29       Impact factor: 2.370

9.  Association of preeclampsia with podocyte turnover.

Authors:  Marlies E Penning; Kitty W M Bloemenkamp; Tom van der Zon; Malu Zandbergen; Joke M Schutte; Jan A Bruijn; Ingeborg M Bajema; Hans J Baelde
Journal:  Clin J Am Soc Nephrol       Date:  2014-07-17       Impact factor: 8.237

Review 10.  Renal physiology of pregnancy.

Authors:  Katharine L Cheung; Richard A Lafayette
Journal:  Adv Chronic Kidney Dis       Date:  2013-05       Impact factor: 3.620

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