| Literature DB >> 6108448 |
B A Gilchrest, J W Rowe, M C Mihm.
Abstract
The relation between chronic renal failure and the clinical and histological findings in normal-looking skin was studied in twenty-seven patients with minimum to marked rises of serum creatinine; eleven of these were on maintenance haemodialysis, and three were successful renal transplant recipients. Clinical findings, including pruritus and xerosis which affected 48% and 60%, respectively, of the patients overall, correlated strongly with severity of renal failure. Histological examination revealed endothelial cell activation and/or necrosis, basement membrane zone thickening, and reduplication of the basal lamina involving both venules and arterioles in all specimens. The microangiopathy was severe in 18 of 24 (75%) of the uraemic specimens, but severity correlated poorly with serum creatinine level, haemodialysis status, or known duration of renal failure, except that it was less severe in the first 2 years (p < 0.02). In contrast, the microangiopathy was very much less severe in the transplant recipients than in haemodialysed patients (p < 0.02) and, in the patient studied both before and after transplantation, changes regressed from severe to moderate within 2 months of transplantation. Other histological findings present in many specimens did not correlate with vessel changes. The findings establish the existence of a potentially reversible microangiopathy in normal-looking skin of patients with chronic renal failure. Further study is needed to determine if it reflects the same pathological process that underlies the development of accelerated atherosclerosis responsible for about half the deaths among patients on maintenance haemodialysis.Entities:
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Year: 1980 PMID: 6108448 DOI: 10.1016/s0140-6736(80)92337-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lancet ISSN: 0140-6736 Impact factor: 79.321