| Literature DB >> 34406477 |
Jessica Serafinelli1, Antonio Mastrangelo1, William Morello1, Valeria Fanny Cerioni2, Adib Salim3, Manuela Nebuloni4, Giovanni Montini5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Histological findings of kidney involvement have been rarely reported in pediatric patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection. Here, we describe clinical, laboratory, and histological findings of two pediatric cases with almost exclusive kidney involvement by SARS-CoV-2.Entities:
Keywords: Children; Glomerulonephritis; Kidney biopsy; SARS-CoV-2; Tubular damage
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34406477 PMCID: PMC8371583 DOI: 10.1007/s00467-021-05212-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Nephrol ISSN: 0931-041X Impact factor: 3.714
Fig. 1A, B, C, D, E Histological finding of first biopsy in patient 1. A (light microscopy): diffuse and segmental mesangial proliferation with endocapillary proliferation without crescents or sclerosis (periodic acid Schiff stain). Electron microscopy: a tubular cell (B) contains rare intra-vacuolar virus-like particles (detail C, arrows) of about 80–90 nm in diameter, with rare preserved spikes (E), structure, and location suggestive of coronavirus infection. The cell also contains isolated vesicles delimited by a double membrane, similar to the viral replicative organelle DMV involved in viral-RNA replication, described in RNA-positive virus included SARS-CoV2. OM (original magnification): B × 4400, C × 20,000, D × 85,000. Bar: B 2micron, C 500 nm, D 200 nm. C Glomerular fine granular electron dense deposits, with mesangial and sub-endothelial localization. F, G, H, I, J Histological finding of second kidney biopsy in patient 1. Light microscopy: evidence of global mesangial proliferation with fibrocellular crescent in 30% of glomeruli (of the 33 glomeruli, fibrocellular crescents were present in 9, and fibrotic crescents in 6, of which 2 have complete floccular sclerosis), diffuse segmental glomerular sclerosis, and initial membranoproliferative pattern in association with interstitial fibrosis, suggestive of a worsening of kidney activity and an appearance of signs of chronic nephropathy. Trichrome stain (F). Electron microscopy: increase in the sclerotic component of matrix (G), widespread presence of finely granular electron dense deposits (H, I, J); presence of segmental GBM deposits mainly intramembrane, sometimes sub-endothelial and occasionally sub-epithelial (I). Lamellation and reticulation of the lamina densa (I). Features of reabsorption of immune deposits (H, I). Focal images of deposits associated with mesangial interpositions (membranoproliferative pattern) (G, J). Podocytes: alterations secondary to lesions of the basement membrane. Segmental monocytes and rare granulocytes sometimes with occlusion of the capillary lumen, sometimes associated with intraluminal fibrin aggregates (I, J). Widespread loss of fenestrations of the endothelial cells (I). No virus-like particles were evident. K, L, M Histological features of kidney biopsy in patient 2. Light microscopy: marked neutrophilic, and lympho-plasmacellular invasion of the interstitium with multi-focal tubular acute damage suggestive of tubulitis. Trichrome stain (K). Electron microscopy: mild secondary sclerotic-ischemic changes of the mesangial matrix associated with mild thickening of GBM and podocytes effacement (L, M). No images suggestive of immune deposits or virus-like particles were observed