| Literature DB >> 31623557 |
Vivian W Y Leung1, Sarah-Jeanne Pilon2, Pierre O Fiset2, Shaifali Sandal3,4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Lipofuscin deposition is a characteristic manifestation of aging. There is very limited literature in humans and in animals describing these deposits in native kidneys. Overall, it is thought to be non-pathogenic and successful transplants from a donor with lipofuscin deposits have been reported. We present the case of a patient who underwent a kidney transplant and a for-cause biopsy post-transplantation incidentally revealed lipofuscin deposition. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Amiodarone; Graft biopsy; Kidney transplantation; Lipofuscin deposition; MICA; Rejection
Year: 2019 PMID: 31623557 PMCID: PMC6798339 DOI: 10.1186/s12882-019-1569-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nephrol ISSN: 1471-2369 Impact factor: 2.388
Potential etiology of lipofuscin deposits in the kidney
| Causes | Commentary |
|---|---|
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| |
| Aging [ | Strongest correlate of lipofuscin levels and deposition |
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| Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome [ | Diffuse tubulopathy from deposition of cytoplasmic irregular waxy brown-yellow ceroid-lipofuscin-like pigment accumulations. This is thought to be pathogenic and leads to chronic kidney disease |
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| Diabetes Mellitus [ | Patients have more lipofuscin deposits that are larger in size |
| Hypertension [ | Lipofuscin deposits may increase in number |
| Uremia [ | High oxidative stress is presumed to be the cause |
| Beta-Thalassemia Major [ | This feature may be related to vitamin E deficiency secondary to fat malabsorption or hyper-consumption of Vitamin E |
| Vitamin E deficiency [ | Large amount of lipid peroxides that was produced in the kidney for the period of vitamin E deficiency reacted with amino acids or protein-amino acids to produce lipofuscin by glutathione depletion. |
| Neurodegenerative disorders [ | Studies have focused on increased lipofuscin deposits in neuronal cells only |
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| Amiodarone [ | Cutaneous deposition occurs after 20 months of amiodarone use (dose: ≥160 mg/day) and is considered reversible |
| Aluminum Exposure [ | Chronic exposure to aluminum sulfate (33 mg/day) in rats led to lipofuscin depositions. In hemodialysis patient, increased membrane lipid peroxidation of red blood cells has been described |
| Analgesics [ | Seen with large doses of Acetophenetidin, Phenacetin and Acetaminophen |
| Estrogen [ | Only described in rats |
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| Rejection | Current case |
Fig. 1Pathology specimen of the graft biopsy of a patient who received a kidney transplant 19 month prior and now had proteinuria (200X magnification unless otherwise specified). a Hematoxylin and eosin: Endocapillary proliferation is seen in the glomeruli. b Hematoxylin and eosin: A peritubular capillary involved by numerous lymphocytes and arrow showing ptc2. c Hematoxylin and eosin: brown granular pigments of 2 μm on average are seen. d Masson-Trichrome: The granules are darker than the surrounding cytoplasm in the tubular cells. e Periodic-acid Schiff: Tubular epithelium with light brown to magenta granules. f Schmorl reaction: The blue coloration of the granules is highlighted. g Fontana: The black coloration of the granules is highlighted. h Prussian blue: the granules are negative for iron staining. i Jone’s silver: the granules are negative for silver staining. j Immunofluorescence (400x magnification): The granules show autofluorescence, exhibited by molecules with fluorophore-like property upon excitation. k Electron microscopy (700x magnification): Tubular cell with intracytoplasmic inclusions, compatible with lipofuscin. They have a lamellar arrangement and a granular matrix (arrow), usually surrounded by mitochondria (arrowhead)
Fig. 2Diagnostic approach to black pigments on hematoxylin and eosin stain
Comparing the pathology reports of the index for-cause biopsy done 19-months post kidney transplant and a follow-up 6-month biopsy
| Index biopsy | 6-month follow up biopsy |
|---|---|
| Gross description:5 cores, ¾ renal cortex, 76 glomeruli, 3 globally sclerosed, 11 arteries | Gross description: 3 cores, all cortex, 22 glomeruli, 3 globally sclerosed, 9 arteries |
Banff lesion scores:a • i1, t0, v0, ti1, i-IFTA1 • g2, ptc2, v0, C4d0, cg0, mm1 • ci1, ct1, ah2, cv3 | Banff lesion scores:a • i0–1, t0–1, v0, ti1, i-IFTA?, t0 • g2, ptc1–2, v0, C4d0, cg0–1, mm1 • ci1–2, ct1–2, ah1, cv1 |
Miscellaneous: lipofuscin deposition, polyoma virus immunostaining negative, immunofluorescence negative to non-specific Indeterminate antibody level against the major-histocompatibility-complex class I-related chain A | Miscellaneous: lipofuscin deposition, immunofluorescence negative to non-specific No donor specific antibody |
aClassification based on Haas et al. Am J Transplant. 2018;18 (2):293–307