| Literature DB >> 25838648 |
S M Matthai1, G Basu2, S Varughese2, A B Pulimood1, T Veerasamy2, A Korula1.
Abstract
Collapsing glomerulopathy (CG) is a proliferative podocytopathy, increasingly recognized in a variety of disease conditions. We report a case of CG in a 16-year-old boy with IgA nephropathy (IgAN) who presented with acute kidney injury, marked proteinuria and hypertension following a short period of anabolic steroid use. Although CG has been associated with long-term anabolic steroid use among body builders, there is no data on the effect of anabolic steroid use in persons with underlying renal disease like IgAN. We postulate that development of CG in our patient could be temporally linked to intake of body-building steroids along with a predisposing background renal disease of IgAN.Entities:
Keywords: Anabolic steroids; IgA nephropathy; collapsing glomerulopathy; human immunodeficiency virus-associated nephropathy
Year: 2015 PMID: 25838648 PMCID: PMC4379634 DOI: 10.4103/0971-4065.140714
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Nephrol ISSN: 0971-4065
Figure 1Implosive collapse of a glomerular tuft with poorly cohesive proliferating podocytes appearing to fall off into the increased urinary space. Periodic acid-Schiff (PAS) stain demonstrates protein resorption droplets in hypertrophic podocytes. Adjacent tubule shows microcystic dilatation (PAS, ×400)
Figure 2Segmental collapse with overlying podocyte hyperplasia (transmission electron microscopy, ×390)
Figure 3Toluidine blue stain highlights protein resorption droplets in hypertrophied podocytes in a glomerulus with segmental collapse and early pseudocrescent (semi-thin sections, toluidine blue, ×400)
Figure 4Pseudocrescent in Bowman's space composed of proliferating podocytes, some with protein resorption droplets. Note the clear spatial demarcation from thin, nonproliferating layer of parietal epithelium. Abundant electron-dense deposits are present along with segmental wrinkling of glomerular basement membranes (transmission electron microscopy, ×610)
Figure 6Enlarged podocyte containing protein resorption droplets (transmission electron microscopy, ×6000)