Literature DB >> 325295

Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis with dense intramembranous alterations. A clinicopathologic study.

V Lamb, C C Tisher, R C McCoy, R R Robinson.   

Abstract

Two major categories of membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (MPGN) designated type 1 and 2 MPGN are currently recognized, largely on the basis of characteristic morphologic and immunofluorescence features. In contrast to experience reported from outside the United States, type 2 MPGN has been observed rather infrequently in this country. In a retrospective clinicopathologic study, 24 kidney specimens obtained from 10 children and young adults including seven females and three males (mean age: 13 years) with type 2 MPGN were identified using light, immunofluorescence, and electron microscopy. The histopathologic findings were related to the clinical course of each patient. When initially seen all patients had hematuria and proteinuria, three were nephrotic, and five were mildly hypertensive. A single patient was mildly azotemic. Eight patients had experienced an upper respiratory ifnection preceding their illness, although only one patient had evidence of a streptococcal pharyngitis. During a period of follow-up averaging 10 years, eight patients were nephrotic at some time during their illness and seven were persistently so. Hypertension was a major problem in eight patients and renal function declined markedly within a year of its onset in five. Persistence of the nephrotic syndrome from early onset of the disease, especially when associated with hypertension, was an additional sign of poor prognosis. Four patients developed chronic renal failure and three received one or more renal allografts. Histologic evidence of recurrent disease was found in allografts from the three patients as early as 7 months after transplantation in the absence of clinical features indicative of recurrent glomerulonephritis. It is concluded that type 2 MPGN is a chronic progressive renal disease of unknown etiology and pathogenesis which chiefly afflicts children and young adults. Hypertension and the early and persistent presence of the nephrotic syndrome suggest a poor prognosis. The disease appears to be largely unresponsive to conventional forms of therapy. The disease recurs with great frequency in allografts, often in the absence of clinical evidence of recurrent glomerulonephritis.

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Year:  1977        PMID: 325295

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lab Invest        ISSN: 0023-6837            Impact factor:   5.662


  5 in total

1.  Treatment of mesangiocapillary glomerulonephritis with alternate-day prednisone--a report of the International Study of Kidney Disease in Children.

Authors:  P Tarshish; J Bernstein; J N Tobin; C M Edelmann
Journal:  Pediatr Nephrol       Date:  1992-03       Impact factor: 3.714

2.  Interstitial nephritis induced by protein-overload proteinuria.

Authors:  A A Eddy
Journal:  Am J Pathol       Date:  1989-10       Impact factor: 4.307

Review 3.  Idiopathic membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis in childhood.

Authors:  C D West
Journal:  Pediatr Nephrol       Date:  1992-01       Impact factor: 3.714

4.  Glomerulonephritis with dense deposits: a variant of membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis or a separate morphological entity? Light, electron microscopic and immunohistochemical study of eleven cases.

Authors:  G Mazzucco; G Barbiano di Belgiojoso; R Confalonieri; R Coppo; G Monga
Journal:  Virchows Arch A Pathol Anat Histol       Date:  1980

Review 5.  Dense deposit disease and C3 glomerulopathy.

Authors:  Thomas D Barbour; Matthew C Pickering; H Terence Cook
Journal:  Semin Nephrol       Date:  2013-11       Impact factor: 5.299

  5 in total

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