Case : A 42-Year-Old Woman with Long-Standing Hematuria

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Case : A 42-Year-Old Woman with Long-Standing Hematuria"

Transcription

1 case records of the massachusetts general hospital Founded by Richard C. Cabot Nancy Lee Harris, m.d., Editor Jo-Anne O. Shepard, m.d., Associate Editor Sally H. Ebeling, Assistant Editor Stacey M. Ellender, Assistant Editor Christine C. Peters, Assistant Editor Case : A 42-Year-Old Woman with Long-Standing Hematuria David J.R. Steele, M.D., and Paul J. Michaels, M.D. A 42-year-old woman visited the nephrology clinic for an evaluation of chronic microscopic hematuria. Microscopic hematuria had been detected 14 years earlier during an episode of cystitis. She subsequently had several episodes of cystitis each year, but the hematuria persisted after treatment and resolution of the infections; usually there were 10 to 20 red cells per high-power field on examination of the urine, but occasionally more than 100, with findings of trace to 1+ proteinuria. An intravenous pyelogram obtained at the time of the initial diagnosis of hematuria was said to have shown a urethral stricture. Ten years before the current evaluation, a urologist prescribed daily nitrofurantoin to prevent recurrent urinary tract infections. A renal ultrasonographic examination prompted by the persistent microscopic hematuria showed normal-size kidneys, no hydronephrosis, and no evidence of renal stones. Cytologic examination of the urine showed no malignant cells. Later that year, the patient s first pregnancy was complicated by gestational diabetes, which was controlled by diet, and by preeclampsia with a blood pressure of 150/95 mm Hg. Labor was induced, and the delivery was uncomplicated. A second pregnancy three years later was uncomplicated. Nine months after the second delivery, mild hypertension developed; systolic blood pressure ranged between 120 and 144 mm Hg and diastolic pressure ranged between 70 and 96 mm Hg over the next three years. Hematuria and intermittent proteinuria persisted. Another renal ultrasonogram was obtained and showed the right kidney to be 9.3 cm long and the left kidney to be 9.4 cm long without hydronephrosis. No residual fluid was seen within the urinary bladder after voiding. A nephrology consultation was requested. The patient was a native of the Philippines and had emigrated to the United States at 26 years of age. She worked as a nurse. When she came to the nephrology clinic, she had not had an episode of cystitis for three years. A thyroidectomy for goiter was performed when she was 13 years of age, after which she was prescribed levothyroxine (0.125 mg per day). Her father had had hypertension and had died at the age of 72 from a stroke. Her mother was alive and had diabetes. Her brother died at 46 years of age while on dialysis, of renal failure that was reportedly caused by the use of analgesic agents for the treatment of chronic gout. Two sisters were said to have hematuria; one of them had hypresentation of case From the Renal Unit, Department of Medicine (D.J.R.S.), and the Department of Pathology (P.J.M.), Massachusetts General Hospital; and the Departments of Medicine (D.J.R.S.) and Pathology (P.J.M.), Harvard Medical School. N Engl J Med 2004;351: Copyright 2004 Massachusetts Medical Society. 2851

2 pertension, and the other a history of goiter. The patient s two daughters were well. On physical examination, the patient s weight was 57.2 kg (126 lb), the blood pressure 138/88 mm Hg, and the pulse 72 beats per minute. The results of a physical examination were normal, except for scars from thyroid surgery. The results of a complete blood count, measurements of glucose and electrolyte levels, renal-function tests, measurement of serum immunoglobulin levels, protein electrophoresis, and tests for cryoglobulins, complement, antinuclear antibodies, rheumatoid factor, and urinary Bence Jones protein were normal. Serologic tests were positive for hepatitis B antibody, negative for hepatitis B antigen, and negative for hepatitis C antibodies. Urinalysis disclosed 20 to 50 red cells per high-power field and 1+ proteinuria. Microscopical examination of the urinary sediment disclosed dysmorphic red cells and two cellular casts thought to be red-cell casts. Treatment with lisinopril, 5 mg daily, was prescribed. A 24-hour urine collection of 1600 ml contained 1152 mg of creatinine and 160 mg of protein. At follow-up examinations, five weeks and eight weeks later, the blood pressure was 100/60 and 110/60 mm Hg, respectively. A diagnostic procedure was performed. differential diagnosis Dr. David J.R. Steele: This patient presented to me in the clinic with long-standing microscopic hematuria, low-grade proteinuria, a history of mild hypertension, preserved renal function, and a family history of renal disease. Microscopic hematuria is generally defined as more than one to three red cells per high-power field in a centrifuged urine specimen. It has a broad differential diagnosis. In patients with hematuria without proteinuria, approximately 10 percent of cases are due to a glomerular process and the remaining cases are due to urologic factors, although estimates vary widely. In many cases, no cause is found despite extensive evaluation. 1,2 nonglomerular causes of microscopic hematuria Nonglomerular causes of microscopic hematuria involving the kidney and urinary tract include neoplasms of the kidney, the collecting system, the ureter, and the bladder; nephrolithiasis; cystic diseases; papillary necrosis; hypercalciuria; hyperuricosuria; and sickle cell disease. A urologic workup of this patient included a normal intravenous pyelogram and renal ultrasound imaging that showed kidneys that appeared normal and no evidence of a renal mass lesion. Cytologic examination of the urine was normal. Cystoscopy had not been performed, presumably because there were no risk factors for bladder cancer. Helical computed tomographic (CT) imaging either with or without contrast material currently the imaging method of choice for diagnosing either a kidney stone or an occult cancer of the upper urinary tract, and more sensitive than ultrasonography had not been done in this patient. The crux of this patient s initial evaluation was the microscopical examination of the urine sediment. The sediment contained dysmorphic red cells and red-cell casts. These findings help us differentiate between hematuria arising from a glomerular source and hematuria from a nonglomerular source. Dysmorphic red cells, or acanthocytes, are red cells that have undergone microtrauma while traversing a diseased glomerular basement membrane; such trauma results in structural changes, including loss of biconvexity and the appearance of membrane blebs. Dysmorphic red cells are best seen during phase-contrast microscopical examination of a centrifuged urine sediment (Fig. 1A and 1B). The reliability of dysmorphic red cells on their own as a predictor of glomerular disease in the absence of red-cell casts is controversial. 3,4 However, the combination of dysmorphic red cells and red-cell casts is believed to pinpoint a glomerular origin of hematuria; this diagnosis is more likely to be valid if proteinuria is present. In this case, the level of proteinuria was below that which is ordinarily considered clinically significant (300 mg per 24- hour collection, or a protein-to-creatinine ratio of 0.3). Nevertheless, the combination of findings suggested hematuria of a glomerular origin. glomerular causes of microscopic hematuria Once the glomerulus has been defined as the source of hematuria, the differential diagnosis can be narrowed to a limited number of disease processes (Table 1). The probability that this patient had focal glomerulonephritis was small, because of her prolonged hematuria, the minimal proteinuria, her stable normal renal function, and the negative serologic workup. Her clinical presentation was not consistent with a collagen vascular process, anti glomerular basement membrane disease, or vasculitis. Tests for hepatitis B surface antigen and hepatitis C antibody were negative. The long natural 2852

3 case records of the massachusetts general hospital A Table 1. Differential Diagnosis of Isolated Hematuria of Glomerular Origin. Primary glomerulonephritis IgA nephropathy Poststreptococcal Membranoproliferative B Secondary glomerulonephritis Associated with depletion of immune complex Lupus nephritis Hepatitis C associated nephritis and cryoglobulinemia Bacterial endocarditis Pauci-immune (no depletion of immune complex) Antinuclear cytoplasmic antibody associated glomerulonephritis Anti glomerular basement membrane disease Polyarteritis Hereditary causes Thin basement membrane nephropathy Alport s syndrome (hereditary nephritis) Fabry s disease Nail patella syndrome Fabry s disease, the nail patella syndrome, and possibly in some kindreds IgA nephropathy. Figure 1. Dysmorphic Red Cells in Urinary Sediment. Panel A shows red-cell casts (arrow) similar to the one seen in this patient. Panel B shows dysmorphic red cells (arrows), indicative of a glomerular lesion. (Photomicrographs from other patients, courtesy of Dirk Hentschel, Department of Nephrology, Massachusetts General Hospital.) history in the absence of clinically significant proteinuria and hypertension is not consistent with poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis. The family history of renal disease suggested the possibility of a hereditary renal disorder. The patient had two sisters who had hematuria and apparently normal renal function; one is said to have had hypertension, although we do not have the details. In addition, her brother died at a young age of endstage renal disease, with the cause said to be analgesics used to treat gout. We have incomplete records of these events, but we should consider alternative diagnoses, including the possibility that the brother had a hereditary renal disease. Hereditary renal diseases associated with hematuria include Alport s syndrome (hereditary nephritis), thin-basementmembrane nephropathy, polycystic kidney disease, IgA Nephropathy IgA nephropathy is a common cause of microscopic hematuria. 5 It results from mesangial IgA deposition. Although some patients have an elevated IgA level, not all do; an increase in IgA level alone is not sufficient to produce this disease. A defect in galactosylation of IgA1 may play a role. A patient who has IgA nephropathy may present with hematuria (with or without proteinuria), hypertension, and a rising serum creatinine level. The natural history of the condition varies among patients, ranging from those who have hematuria with stable renal function to those (between 15 percent and 40 percent in reported studies) in whom end-stage renal disease develops. There are no markers that predict progressive disease in patients who present with only minor urinary abnormalities. 6 A subgroup of patients with IgA nephropathy may have hereditary disease. A linkage of IgA nephropathy to chromosome 6q22 23 with a dominant mode of inheritance has been shown. 7 Alport s Syndrome Alport s syndrome is a rare hereditary renal disease caused by a defect in genes coding for the a5 chain of type IV collagen. The majority of cases are X-linked; autosomal recessive inheritance occurs 2853

4 in 5 percent of cases and autosomal dominant inheritance in a few kindreds. The first sign of the disease is microscopic or occasionally macroscopic hematuria. Alport s syndrome occurs predominantly in men, and affected male patients classically have hematuria, proteinuria (urinary protein excretion, less than 1 to 2 g per day), progressive renal failure, and sensorineural deafness. Lenticonus of the anterior lens capsule, retinopathy, and leiomyomatosis are sometimes associated with the disease. Deafness occurs in approximately 55 percent of patients. The urine sediment is likely to contain dysmorphic red cells and red-cell casts. Patients with Alport s syndrome lack a component of glomerular basement membrane, and anti glomerular basement membrane glomerulonephritis may develop after kidney transplantation. The disorder is clinically variable, probably reflecting the complexity of collagen genetics. 8,9 Heterozygous females in families with Alport s syndrome may have intermittent or persistent microscopic hematuria with no other manifestations of renal disease; about 10 percent of heterozygous female patients have no hematuria. Proteinuria is uncommon, as is hypertension. The prognosis for affected girls and women is generally good, but end-stage renal disease develops in some women. In such cases, gross hematuria in childhood, nephrotic-range proteinuria, and thickening of the glomerular basement membrane (identified by the use of electron microscopy) are associated with progressive nephritis. Hearing loss and lenticonus, although rare, are also associated with an adverse outcome in heterozygous female patients. Pregnancy does not appear to have an adverse effect on renal function in patients with mild disease but may accelerate the decline in renal function in those with severe disease. Thin Basement Membrane Nephropathy In thin basement membrane nephropathy, also known as benign familial hematuria or thin basement membrane disease, the glomerular basement membrane is uniformly thinned to about half its normal thickness. Many cases follow an autosomal dominant mode of inheritance and, as with Alport s syndrome, are caused by mutations in the type IV collagen gene in this case the a3 and a4 chains. There is a female-to-male ratio of 1.6. The prevalence of this disease cannot be accurately estimated because of the reluctance of nephrologists to perform a renal biopsy in patients with isolated hematuria, but it is likely that thin basement membrane nephropathy occurs in about 1 percent of the general population. 10 Patients present with hematuria; there may be proteinuria, although usually urinary protein excretion is less than 500 mg per day, and hypertension is rare. There are no extrarenal manifestations. Renal failure occurs rarely and, for unclear reasons, often in association with other glomerulonephritides. Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis is reported to occur in at least 5 percent of patients. IgA nephropathy may occur together with thin basement membrane nephropathy probably more often than by chance alone. 11 The diagnosis is based on the combination of hematuria and characteristic changes on renal biopsy and on the finding of hematuria in multiple family members without a history of end-stage renal disease. Treatment is nonspecific and includes control of hypertension, use of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors if proteinuria or hypertension is present, and modest dietary protein restriction. 10,12 differential diagnosis of alport s syndrome and thin basement membrane nephropathy The distinction between thin basement membrane nephropathy and Alport s syndrome is not always easy to make. It is important to distinguish between the two when possible, because of the different prognoses of these conditions and because of the implications for the offspring of the female carriers of Alport s syndrome. Since hearing loss, lenticonus, and retinopathy are found in fewer than 10 percent of female carriers of Alport s syndrome, thin basement membrane nephropathy and Alport s syndrome are difficult to distinguish on clinical grounds alone in women who have hematuria as their only clinical abnormality. 13,14 The family history may be useful. A family history of hematuria without renal failure supports a diagnosis of thin basement membrane nephropathy. If the nature of renal failure in a family member is unknown, then information regarding hearing loss or eye disorders may be useful. In the case under discussion, there was no history of either in the brother who had end-stage renal disease. The absence of hearing loss or optical abnormalities, however, does not rule out Alport s syndrome as the cause of end-stage renal disease in his case, since these extrarenal abnormalities are not present in all cases. In questionable cases, a renal biopsy may be helpful. 10,12,

5 case records of the massachusetts general hospital role of renal biopsy A renal biopsy is not routinely recommended in the evaluation of patients with isolated microscopic hematuria, unless there is evidence of clinically significant proteinuria or a progressive deterioration in renal function. In their review of microscopic hematuria in the Journal, Cohen and Brown 18 recommended against performing a renal biopsy in cases of isolated glomerular microscopic hematuria, since available data suggest that identification of the specific disease does not make a difference in management or outcome. Complications of renal biopsy are infrequent but must be borne in mind. Major bleeding occurs in 1 to 2 percent of the patients who undergo biopsy, and mortality is about 0.1 percent. We accept that not having a tissue diagnosis is valid in most patients with isolated hematuria whose disease is following a benign course. In this case, however, I favored performing a biopsy because of increasing concern on the part of a medically sophisticated patient and our desire to define her underlying diagnosis in the context of her strong family history. The hope was that prognostic information would be obtained that would be reassuring to the patient and her family and that further evaluations could be avoided. Dr. Nelson Goes (Nephrology): Does the fact that the patient comes from the Philippines alter the evaluation? Are there any tropical diseases that could cause chronic hematuria? Dr. Steele: In tropical regions there is a high incidence of schistosomiasis, which may be manifested in the patient by lower urinary tract bleeding. It certainly is a consideration under appropriate circumstances. A B C dr. david j.r. steele s diagnosis Thin basement membrane nephropathy or X-linked Alport s syndrome or IgA nephropathy. pathological discussion Dr. Paul J. Michaels: The diagnostic procedure was a percutaneous renal biopsy. The glomeruli were normal when examined by light microscopy, except for focal, mild mesangial hypercellularity (Fig. 2A). The interstitium, renal tubules, and vessels were normal. Immunofluorescent staining of the glomeruli showed slight segmental linear staining for IgG and albumin. Only very focal, trace granular Figure 2. Examination of Renal-Biopsy Specimen by Light and Electron Microscopy. The glomerulus shows a slight increase in the mesangial matrix, with focal mesangial hypercellularity (Panel A) (hematoxylin and eosin). On electron-microscopical examination, the glomerular basement membrane appears diffusely thin (Panel B). Focally, small electrondense granules (microparticles) are present (arrowheads), and the endothelial portion of the basement membrane is scalloped (Panel C, arrows). 2855

6 staining for IgA and IgM was noted in the mesangium, excluding a diagnosis of IgA nephropathy. Electron-microscopical examination showed diffusely thin glomerular basement membranes (Fig. 2B). Some segments were thickened, scalloped, and contained electron-dense granules ( microparticles ), but no definite laminations were seen (Fig. 2C). Ultrastructural morphometric analysis revealed a harmonic mean (±SD) glomerular-basement-membrane thickness of 219±20 nm, with a range of 121 to 328 nm. The normal glomerularbasement-membrane thickness in women as measured by this method is 326±45 nm. These histologic, immunofluorescent, and ultrastructural findings are consistent with a diagnosis of either thin basement membrane nephropathy or a carrier state of X-linked Alport s syndrome (Table 2). Thin glomerular capillary basement membranes are the only pathological abnormality in the kidneys of patients with thin basement membrane nephropathy. 19 However, thin glomerular basement membranes are found in Alport s syndrome and may be the only finding in early Alport s syndrome and in female carriers of X-linked Alport s syndrome. In carriers of X-linked Alport s syndrome, however, there may also be areas of splitting and thickening of the basement membrane, which worsen over time; these abnormal areas are not seen in thin basement membrane nephropathy. In this case, the presence of widespread thin glomerular basement membranes in combination with focal membrane thickening, scalloping, and microparticles suggests that the patient is a carrier of X-linked Alport s syndrome. However, although full-blown Alport s syndrome is therefore excluded, the pathological findings alone are not sufficient to distinguish with certainty between thin basement membrane nephropathy and heterozygosity for an Alport mutation. The genetic mutations responsible for the phenotypic abnormalities seen in both X-linked and autosomal recessive or dominant Alport s syndrome and thin basement membrane nephropathy have been characterized (Table 3). 20,21 These discoveries have enabled pathologists to use ancillary diagnostic techniques to narrow the differential diagnosis in patients with thin glomerular basement membranes. The three clinical entities have in common abnormalities in the a chains of type IV collagen (COL4), specifically the a3, a4, and a5 chains, which form a triple helical protomer found in the glomerular basement membrane (Fig. 3). 8 X-linked Alport s syndrome is typically caused by mutations in the a5 chain of type IV collagen (COL4A5). 20 In contrast, autosomal Alport s syndrome, which can be inherited in both a recessive and a dominant fashion, is the result of defects in the genes encoding for either the a3 (COL4A3) or the a4 (COL4A4) subunits of type IV collagen. 21 The mutations seen in thin basement membrane nephropathy also fre- Table 2. Common Renal-Biopsy Findings in Conditions Causing Microscopic Hematuria. Method of Examination IgA Nephropathy Thin Basement Membrane Nephropathy Early X-Linked Alport s Syndrome Female Carrier of X-Linked Alport s Syndrome Light microscopy Immunofluorescence staining Electron microscopy Normal or mild glomerular mesangial proliferation; with or without mesangial deposits on trichrome and silver staining Mesangial deposition of IgA and C3; less extensive deposition of IgM and IgG Electron-dense deposits in the mesangium Normal or mild increase in mesangium Usually negative for immunoglobulin and complement; occasional granular C3 deposition; linear staining for a3 a5 chains of type IV collagen Diffusely thin glomerular basement membrane Normal or mild podocyte hypertrophy with focal rigid and thickened capillary walls Usually negative for immunoglobulin and complement; loss of staining for a3 a5 chains of type IV collagen Thin glomerular basement membrane; varying degrees of thickening, splitting, laminations, and electron-dense granules Normal or mild mesangial hypercellularity Usually negative for immunoglobulin and complement; either linear or segmental staining for a3 a5 chains of type IV collagen Diffusely thin glomerular basement membrane; focal areas of splitting, laminations, and electron-dense granules 2856

7 case records of the massachusetts general hospital Table 3. Conditions Associated with Thin Basement Membrane on Electron Microscopy and Corresponding Mutations of Type IV Collagen. Thin basement membrane nephropathy COL4A3 COL4A4 Autosomal recessive Alport s syndrome COL4A3 COL4A4 Autosomal dominant Alport s syndrome COL4A3 COL4A4 X-linked Alport s syndrome COL4A5 COL4A6 quently involve both the a3 and a4 chains of type IV collagen, suggesting that autosomal Alport s syndrome and thin basement membrane nephropathy may represent points on a spectrum of a single disease process. 22 Thus, some persons with thin basement membrane nephropathy may have a single copy of a mutated gene in either the a3 or a4 chain of type IV collagen that, when present in a homozygous form, leads to autosomal recessive Alport s syndrome. Different mutations in these same genes occasionally lead to the less common autosomal dominant Alport s syndrome. The mutations in Alport s syndrome lead to a segmental reduction in the amount of both a3 and a5 collagen in the glomerular basement membrane; this defect can be detected by immunofluorescence staining with antibodies to these proteins. In contrast, the mutations in the a3 chain in thin basement membrane nephropathy do not produce this pattern. Segmental loss of glomerular staining for the a5 chain of type IV collagen suggests a carrier state for X-linked Alport s syndrome; however, normal staining does not necessarily rule out the diagnosis. 23 Additional diagnostic tests include immunofluorescence staining of a skin-biopsy specimen for the a5 chain of type IV collagen. Interrupted staining in a female patient suggests a carrier status for X-linked Alport s syndrome, whereas even, linear staining supports the diagnosis of thin basement membrane nephropathy. 24 Finally, sequencing of the gene for the a5 chain of type IV collagen can be performed to confirm or rule out X-linked Alport s syndrome, since this gene is usually unaffected in patients with thin basement membrane nephropathy. Figure 3. Structure of the a Chains of Type IV Collagen and Mutations in Renal Disease. Six distinct a chains (left) are arranged into three triple helical protomers composed of different chains (right). Each protomer has a 7S triple helical domain at the N-terminal; a long, triple helical, collagenous domain in the middle of the molecule; and a noncollagenous (NC1) trimer at the C-terminal. The a1, a1, a2 protomer is found in all basement membranes, whereas the a3, a4, a5 and a5, a5, a6 protomers are differentially distributed in various tissues (box). This heterogeneous distribution probably accounts for the variety of overlapping clinical syndromes associated with mutations in different chains. (The illustration has been adapted from Hudson et al. 8 ) 2857

8 A B Figure 4. Immunofluorescence Staining of Renal-Biopsy Specimens with Antibody for a3 Chains of Type IV Collagen. Immunofluorescence staining of a specimen from a kidney without disease (Panel A) reveals bright, uninterrupted linear staining for the a3 chain of type IV collagen. However, staining of a specimen from the patient s glomerulus with the same monoclonal antibody reveals an overall decrease in staining intensity, with further segmental reduction of staining in the capillary loops (Panel B, arrows). A similar pattern was seen with the use of an antibody to the a5 chain. In the patient under discussion, staining of the renal-biopsy specimen with antibodies to the a3 and a5 chains of type IV collagen revealed segmental reduction in the normal linear staining along the glomerular basement membranes for both proteins, as compared with a control glomerulus (Fig. 4A and 4B). This segmental reduction in staining for the a3 and a5 chains of type IV collagen further suggests a carrier state for X-linked Alport s syndrome. Dr. Steele: Since her evaluation, the patient has been seen in annual follow-up visits. Two years after the diagnostic biopsy, she remains well, with no evidence of progressive renal disease. She continues to receive treatment for hypertension and has microscopic hematuria and stable mild proteinuria. She reports that her daughters have been tested and do not have hematuria. She is in the process of reviewing her diagnosis and its implications with other family members. Dr. Lynn D. Cornell (Pathology): In the future, with a patient such as this one, would you consider doing a skin biopsy instead of a renal biopsy? Dr. Steele: Skin biopsy is a much less invasive procedure than renal biopsy and would therefore be a desirable alternative. If clinicopathological studies show that it is reliable for distinguishing between Alport s syndrome and thin basement membrane nephropathy, then it represents a good alternative. Dr. Michaels: A renal biopsy may still be important when IgA nephropathy is in the differential diagnosis, which it often is. anatomical diagnosis Nephropathy with thin and focally disrupted glomerular basement membranes and decreased a3 and a5 chains of type IV collagen, consistent with a carrier state of X-linked Alport s syndrome. references 1. Ahmed Z, Lee J. Asymptomatic urinary abnormalities: hematuria and proteinuria. Med Clin North Am 1997;81: McGregor DO, Lynn KL, Bailey RR, Robson RA, Gardner J. Clinical audit of the use of renal biopsy in the management of isolated microscopic hematuria. Clin Nephrol 1998;49: Kohler H, Wandel E, Brunck B. Acanthocyturia a characteristic marker for glomerular bleeding. Kidney Int 1991;40: Kitamoto Y, Tomita M, Akamine M, et al. Differentiation of hematuria using a uniquely shaped red cell. Nephron 1993;64: Topham PS, Harper SJ, Furness PN, Harris KPG, Walls J, Feehally J. Glomerular disease as a cause of isolated microscopic haematuria. Q J Med 1994;87: Donadio JV, Grande JP. IgA nephropathy. N Engl J Med 2002;347: Gharavi AG, Yan Y, Scolari F, et al. IgA nephropathy, the most common cause of glomerulonephritis, is linked to 6q Nat Genet 2000;28: Hudson BG, Tryggvason K, Sundaramoorthy M, Neilson EG. Alport s syndrome, Goodpasture s syndrome, and type IV collagen. N Engl J Med 2003;348: Kashtan CE, Michael AF. Alport syndrome. Kidney Int 1996;50: Savige J, Rana K, Tonna S, Buzza M, Dagher H, Wang YY. Thin basement membrane nephropathy. Kidney Int 2003;64: Hebert LA, Betts JA, Sedmak DD, Cosio FG, Bay WH, Carlton S. Loin pain-hematuria syndrome associated with thin glomerular basement membrane disease and hemorrhage into renal tubules. Kidney Int 1996; 49:

9 case records of the massachusetts general hospital 12. Tiebosch AT, Frederik PM, van Breda Vriesman PJ, et al. Thin-basement membrane nephropathy in adults with persistent hematuria. N Engl J Med 1989;320: Sakai K, Muramatsu M, Ogiwara H, et al. Living related kidney transplantation in a patient with autosomal-recessive Alport syndrome. Clin Transplant 2003;17: Takemura T, Yanagida H, Yagi K, Moriwaki K, Okada M. Alport syndrome and benign familial hematuria (thin basement membrane disease) in two brothers of a family with hematuria. Clin Nephrol 2003; 60: Tanaka H, Kim ST, Takasugi M, Kuroiwa A. Isolated hematuria in adults: IgA nephropathy is a predominant cause of hematuria compared with thin glomerular basement membrane nephropathy. Am J Nephrol 1996;16: Rumpelt HJ, Langer KH, Scharer K, et al. Split and extremely thin glomerular basement membranes in hereditary nephropathy (Alport s syndrome). Virchows Arch A Pathol Anat Histol 1974;364: Piel CF, Biava CG, Goodman JR. Glomerular basement membrane attenuation in familial nephritis and benign hematuria. J Pediatr 1982;101: Cohen RA, Brown RS. Microscopic hematuria. N Engl J Med 2003;348: Rogers PW, Kurtzman NA, Bunn SM Jr, White MG. Familial benign essential hematuria. Arch Intern Med 1973;131: Myers JC, Jones TA, Pohjolainen ER, et al. Molecular cloning of alpha 5(IV) collagen and assignment of the gene to the region of the X chromosome containing the Alport syndrome locus. Am J Hum Genet 1990;46: Heidet L, Arrondel C, Forestier L, et al. Structure of the human type IV collagen gene COL4A3 and mutations in the autosomal Alport syndrome. J Am Soc Nephrol 2001;12: Buzza M, Wilson D, Savige J. Segregation of hematuria in thin basement membrane disease with haplotypes at the loci for Alport syndrome. Kidney Int 2001;59: Lajoie G. Approach to the diagnosis of thin basement membrane nephropathy in females with the use of antibodies to type IV collagen. Arch Pathol Lab Med 2001;125: Liapis H, Gokden N, Hmiel P, Miner JH. Histopathology, ultrastructure and clinical phenotypes in thin glomerular basement membrane disease variants. Hum Pathol 2002;33: Copyright 2004 Massachusetts Medical Society. 35-millimeter slides for the case records Any reader of the Journal who uses the Case Records of the Massachusetts General Hospital as a medical teaching exercise or reference material is eligible to receive 35-mm slides, with identifying legends, of the pertinent x-ray films, electrocardiograms, gross specimens, and photomicrographs of each case. The slides are 2 in. by 2 in., for use with a standard 35-mm projector. These slides, which illustrate the current cases in the Journal, are mailed from the Department of Pathology to correspond to the week of publication and may be retained by the subscriber. Each year approximately 250 slides from 40 cases are sent to each subscriber. The cost of the subscription is $450 per year. Application forms for the current subscription year, which began in January, may be obtained from Lantern Slides Service, Department of Pathology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA (telephone ). Slides from individual cases may be obtained at a cost of $35 per case. 2859

RENAL HISTOPATHOLOGY

RENAL HISTOPATHOLOGY RENAL HISTOPATHOLOGY Peter McCue, M.D. Department of Pathology, Anatomy & Cell Biology Sidney Kimmel Medical College There are no conflicts of interest. 1 Goals and Objectives! Goals Provide introduction

More information

A clinical syndrome, composed mainly of:

A clinical syndrome, composed mainly of: Nephritic syndrome We will discuss: 1)Nephritic syndrome: -Acute postinfectious (poststreptococcal) GN -IgA nephropathy -Hereditary nephritis 2)Rapidly progressive GN (RPGN) A clinical syndrome, composed

More information

Glomerular pathology in systemic disease

Glomerular pathology in systemic disease Glomerular pathology in systemic disease Lecture outline Lupus nephritis Diabetic nephropathy Glomerulonephritis Associated with Bacterial Endocarditis and Other Systemic Infections Henoch-Schonlein Purpura

More information

Glomerular diseases mostly presenting with Nephritic syndrome

Glomerular diseases mostly presenting with Nephritic syndrome Glomerular diseases mostly presenting with Nephritic syndrome 1 The Nephritic Syndrome Pathogenesis: proliferation of the cells in glomeruli & leukocytic infiltrate Injured capillary walls escape of RBCs

More information

Histopathology: Glomerulonephritis and other renal pathology

Histopathology: Glomerulonephritis and other renal pathology Histopathology: Glomerulonephritis and other renal pathology These presentations are to help you identify basic histopathological features. They do not contain the additional factual information that you

More information

Dr Ian Roberts Oxford. Oxford Pathology Course 2010 for FRCPath Illustration-Cellular Pathology. Oxford Radcliffe NHS Trust

Dr Ian Roberts Oxford. Oxford Pathology Course 2010 for FRCPath Illustration-Cellular Pathology. Oxford Radcliffe NHS Trust Dr Ian Roberts Oxford Oxford Pathology Course 2010 for FRCPath Present the basic diagnostic features of the commonest conditions causing proteinuria & haematuria Highlight diagnostic pitfalls Nephrotic

More information

Glomerular pathology-2 Nephritic syndrome. Dr. Nisreen Abu Shahin

Glomerular pathology-2 Nephritic syndrome. Dr. Nisreen Abu Shahin Glomerular pathology-2 Nephritic syndrome Dr. Nisreen Abu Shahin 1 The Nephritic Syndrome Pathogenesis: inflammation proliferation of the cells in glomeruli & leukocytic infiltrate Injured capillary walls

More information

Thin basement membrane syndrome in adults

Thin basement membrane syndrome in adults J Clin Pathol 1987;40:318-322 Thin basement membrane syndrome in adults S ABE, Y AMAGASAKI,* S IYORI,t K KONISHI, E KATO, H SAKAGUCHI,: K SHIMOYAMA** From the Department of Internal Medicine and tpathology,

More information

Surgical Pathology Report

Surgical Pathology Report Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center Department of Pathology Shreveport, Louisiana Accession #: Collected: Received: Reported: 6/1/2012 09:18 6/2/2012 09:02 6/2/2012 Patient Name: Med. Rec.

More information

THE URINARY SYSTEM. The cases we will cover are:

THE URINARY SYSTEM. The cases we will cover are: THE URINARY SYSTEM The focus of this week s lab will be pathology of the urinary system. Diseases of the kidney can be broken down into diseases that affect the glomeruli, tubules, interstitium, and blood

More information

THE URINARY SYSTEM. The cases we will cover are:

THE URINARY SYSTEM. The cases we will cover are: THE URINARY SYSTEM The focus of this week s lab will be pathology of the urinary system. Diseases of the kidney can be broken down into diseases that affect the glomeruli, tubules, interstitium, and blood

More information

Overview of glomerular diseases

Overview of glomerular diseases Overview of glomerular diseases *Endothelial cells are fenestrated each fenestra: 70-100nm in diameter Contractile, capable of proliferation, makes ECM & releases mediators *Glomerular basement membrane

More information

Pathology of Complement Mediated Renal Disease

Pathology of Complement Mediated Renal Disease Pathology of Complement Mediated Renal Disease Mariam Priya Alexander, MD Associate Professor of Pathology GN Symposium Hong Kong Society of Nephrology July 8 th, 2017 2017 MFMER slide-1 The complement

More information

Renal Pathology 1: Glomerulus. With many thanks to Elizabeth Angus PhD for EM photographs

Renal Pathology 1: Glomerulus. With many thanks to Elizabeth Angus PhD for EM photographs Renal Pathology 1: Glomerulus With many thanks to Elizabeth Angus PhD for EM photographs Anatomy of the Kidney http://www.yalemedicalgroup.org/stw/page.asp?pageid=stw028980 The Nephron http://www.beltina.org/health-dictionary/nephron-function-kidney-definition.html

More information

Most individuals with thin basement membrane nephropathy

Most individuals with thin basement membrane nephropathy The Risks of Thin Basement Membrane Nephropathy Stephen Tonna, Yan Yan Wang, Duncan MacGregor, Roger Sinclair, Paul Martinello, David Power, and Judy Savige Most individuals with thin basement membrane

More information

Year 2004 Paper one: Questions supplied by Megan

Year 2004 Paper one: Questions supplied by Megan QUESTION 53 Endothelial cell pathology on renal biopsy is most characteristic of which one of the following diagnoses? A. Pre-eclampsia B. Haemolytic uraemic syndrome C. Lupus nephritis D. Immunoglobulin

More information

Familial DDD associated with a gain-of-function mutation in complement C3.

Familial DDD associated with a gain-of-function mutation in complement C3. Familial DDD associated with a gain-of-function mutation in complement C3. Santiago Rodríguez de Córdoba, Centro de investigaciones Biológicas, Madrid Valdés Cañedo F. and Vázquez- Martul E., Complejo

More information

Case 3. ACCME/Disclosure. Laboratory results. Clinical history 4/13/2016

Case 3. ACCME/Disclosure. Laboratory results. Clinical history 4/13/2016 Case 3 Lynn D. Cornell, M.D. Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN Cornell.Lynn@mayo.edu USCAP Renal Case Conference March 13, 2016 ACCME/Disclosure Dr. Cornell has nothing to disclose Clinical history 57-year-old

More information

Ordering Physician. Collected REVISED REPORT. Performed. IgG IF, Renal MCR. Lambda IF, Renal MCR. C1q IF, Renal. MCR Albumin IF, Renal MCR

Ordering Physician. Collected REVISED REPORT. Performed. IgG IF, Renal MCR. Lambda IF, Renal MCR. C1q IF, Renal. MCR Albumin IF, Renal MCR RenalPath Level IV Wet Ts IgA I Renal IgM I Renal Kappa I Renal Renal Bx Electron Microscopy IgG I Renal Lambda I Renal C1q I Renal C3 I Renal Albumin I Renal ibrinogen I Renal Mayo Clinic Dept. of Lab

More information

C1q nephropathy the Diverse Disease

C1q nephropathy the Diverse Disease C1q nephropathy the Diverse Disease Danica Galešić Ljubanović School of Medicine, University of Zagreb Dubrava University Hospital Zagreb, Croatia Definition Dominant or codominant ( 2+), mesangial staining

More information

Interesting case seminar: Native kidneys Case Report:

Interesting case seminar: Native kidneys Case Report: Interesting case seminar: Native kidneys Case Report: Proximal tubulopathy and light chain deposition disease presented as severe pulmonary hypertension with right-sided cardiac dysfunction and nephrotic

More information

Crescentic Glomerulonephritis (RPGN)

Crescentic Glomerulonephritis (RPGN) Crescentic Glomerulonephritis (RPGN) Background Rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis (RPGN) is defined as any glomerular disease characterized by extensive crescents (usually >50%) as the principal histologic

More information

Glomerular Pathology- 1 Nephrotic Syndrome. Dr. Nisreen Abu Shahin

Glomerular Pathology- 1 Nephrotic Syndrome. Dr. Nisreen Abu Shahin Glomerular Pathology- 1 Nephrotic Syndrome Dr. Nisreen Abu Shahin The Nephrotic Syndrome a clinical complex resulting from glomerular disease & includes the following: (1) massive proteinuria (3.5 gm /day

More information

Membranes basales glomérulaires minces: une lésion courante.

Membranes basales glomérulaires minces: une lésion courante. Membranes basales glomérulaires minces: une lésion courante. Marie Claire Gubler/ Laurence Heidet INSERM U574 / MARHEA Hôpital Necker-Enfants Malades Université Paris Descartes Paris Actualités Néphrologiques

More information

Nephritic vs. Nephrotic Syndrome

Nephritic vs. Nephrotic Syndrome Page 1 of 18 Nephritic vs. Nephrotic Syndrome Terminology: Glomerulus: A network of blood capillaries contained within the cuplike end (Bowman s capsule) of a nephron. Glomerular filtration rate: The rate

More information

Signs and symptoms of thin basement membrane nephropathy: A prospective regional study on primary glomerular disease The Limburg Renal Registry

Signs and symptoms of thin basement membrane nephropathy: A prospective regional study on primary glomerular disease The Limburg Renal Registry Kidney International, Vol. 66 (2004), pp. 909 913 Signs and symptoms of thin basement membrane nephropathy: A prospective regional study on primary glomerular disease The Limburg Renal Registry PIETER

More information

Dr P Sigwadi 30 May 2012

Dr P Sigwadi 30 May 2012 Dr P Sigwadi 30 May 2012 Introduction Haematuria Positive blood on urine dipstick 5 red blood cells/ microliter of urine Prevalence Gross haematuria ( macroscopic) 0.13 % Microscopic- 1.5% Haematuria +

More information

Guidelines for the management of a child with haematuria

Guidelines for the management of a child with haematuria Guidelines for the management of a child with haematuria Children s Kidney Centre University Hospital of Wales Cardiff CF14 4XW DISCLAIMER: These guidelines were produced in good faith by the author(s)

More information

Disorders of the kidney. Urine analysis. Nephrotic and nephritic syndrome.

Disorders of the kidney. Urine analysis. Nephrotic and nephritic syndrome. Disorders of the kidney. Urine analysis. Nephrotic and nephritic syndrome. Azotemia and Urinary Abnormalities Disturbances in urine volume oliguria, anuria, polyuria Abnormalities of urine sediment red

More information

PATTERNS OF RENAL INJURY

PATTERNS OF RENAL INJURY PATTERNS OF RENAL INJURY Normal glomerulus podocyte Glomerular capillaries electron micrograph THE CLINICAL SYNDROMES 1. The Nephrotic Syndrome 2. The Acute Nephritic Syndrome 3. Rapidly Progressive Glomerulonephritis

More information

Dense deposit disease with steroid pulse therapy

Dense deposit disease with steroid pulse therapy Case Report Dense deposit disease with steroid pulse therapy Jun Odaka, Takahiro Kanai, Takane Ito, Takashi Saito, Jun Aoyagi, and Mariko Y Momoi Abstract Treatment of dense deposit disease DDD has not

More information

Case Presentation Turki Al-Hussain, MD

Case Presentation Turki Al-Hussain, MD Case Presentation Turki Al-Hussain, MD Director, Renal Pathology Chapter Saudi Society of Nephrology & Transplantation Consultant Nephropathologist & Urological Pathologist Department of Pathology & Laboratory

More information

FIBRILLARY GLOMERULONEPHRITIS DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA, PITFALLS, AND DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS

FIBRILLARY GLOMERULONEPHRITIS DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA, PITFALLS, AND DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS FIBRILLARY GLOMERULONEPHRITIS DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA, PITFALLS, AND DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS Guillermo A. Herrera MD Louisiana State University, Shreveport Fibrils in bundles 10-20 nm d Diabetic fibrillosis

More information

ESRD Dialysis Prevalence - One Year Statistics

ESRD Dialysis Prevalence - One Year Statistics Age Group IL Other Total 00-04 12 1 13 05-09 5 2 7 10-14 15 1 16 15-19 55 2 57 20-24 170 10 180 25-29 269 14 283 30-34 381 9 390 35-39 583 14 597 40-44 871 20 891 45-49 1,119 20 1,139 50-54 1,505 35 1,540

More information

MODULE 5: HEMATURIA LEARNING OBJECTIVES DEFINITION. KEY WORDS: Hematuria, Cystoscopy, Urine Cytology, UTI, bladder cancer

MODULE 5: HEMATURIA LEARNING OBJECTIVES DEFINITION. KEY WORDS: Hematuria, Cystoscopy, Urine Cytology, UTI, bladder cancer MODULE 5: HEMATURIA KEY WORDS: Hematuria, Cystoscopy, Urine Cytology, UTI, bladder cancer LEARNING OBJECTIVES At the end of this clerkship, the learner will be able to: 1. Define microscopic hematuria.

More information

29 Glomerular disease: an overview

29 Glomerular disease: an overview 29 Glomerular : an overview Renal Extra-renal Neurological changes Clinical syndromes pressure Sore throat (streptococcal) Rash Cardiac valve lesions Hemoptysis Asymptomatic or Acute Glomerulonephritis

More information

Multiple kidney cysts in thin basement membrane disease with proteinuria and kidney function impairment

Multiple kidney cysts in thin basement membrane disease with proteinuria and kidney function impairment Clin Kidney J (2014) 0: 1 6 doi: 10.1093/ckj/sfu033 Original Article Multiple kidney cysts in thin basement membrane disease with and kidney function impairment Angel M. Sevillano 1, Eduardo Gutierrez

More information

HRZZ project: Genotype-Phenotype correlation in Alport's syndrome and Thin Glomerular Basement Membrane Nephropathy. Patohistological Aspects

HRZZ project: Genotype-Phenotype correlation in Alport's syndrome and Thin Glomerular Basement Membrane Nephropathy. Patohistological Aspects HRZZ project: Genotype-Phenotype correlation in Alport's syndrome and Thin Glomerular Basement Membrane Nephropathy Patohistological Aspects Petar Šenjug, MD 1 Professor Danica Galešić Ljubanović, MD,

More information

The incidence of thin glomerular basement membrane

The incidence of thin glomerular basement membrane Approach to the iagnosis of Thin Basement Membrane Nephropathy in Females With the Use of Antibodies to Type IV Collagen Ginette Lajoie, M, FRCPC Context. Thin basement membrane nephropathy is recognized

More information

Monoclonal Gammopathies and the Kidney. Tibor Nádasdy, MD The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH

Monoclonal Gammopathies and the Kidney. Tibor Nádasdy, MD The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH Monoclonal Gammopathies and the Kidney Tibor Nádasdy, MD The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH Monoclonal gammopathy of renal significance (MGRS) Biopsies at OSU (n=475) between 2007 and 2016 AL or AH

More information

Thin basement membrane nephropathy (TBMN), or benign

Thin basement membrane nephropathy (TBMN), or benign The Genetics of Thin Basement Membrane Nephropathy Kesha Rana, Yan Yan Wang, Mark Buzza, Stephen Tonna, Ke Wei Zhang, Tina Lin, Lydia Sin, Smitha Padavarat, and Judy Savige The diagnosis of thin basement

More information

C3 Glomerulonephritis versus C3 Glomerulopathies?

C3 Glomerulonephritis versus C3 Glomerulopathies? Washington University School of Medicine Digital Commons@Becker Kidneycentric Kidneycentric 2016 C3 Glomerulonephritis versus C3 Glomerulopathies? T. Keefe Davis Washington University School of Medicine

More information

Glomerular diseases with organized deposits

Glomerular diseases with organized deposits Glomerular diseases with organized deposits Banu Sis, MD, FRCPC University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada Ulusal Patoloji Kongresi, Manavgat, Antalya 8/11/2012 What is an organized deposit? A number

More information

Case Presentation Turki Al-Hussain, MD

Case Presentation Turki Al-Hussain, MD Case Presentation Turki Al-Hussain, MD Director, Renal Pathology Chapter Saudi Society of Nephrology & Transplantation Consultant Nephropathologist & Urological Pathologist Department of Pathology & Laboratory

More information

Membranoproliferative Glomerulonephritis

Membranoproliferative Glomerulonephritis Membranoproliferative Glomerulonephritis MPGN is characterizedby alterations in the GBM and mesangium and by proliferation of glomerular cells. 5% to 10% of cases of 1ry nephrotic syndrome in children

More information

Alport Syndrome and Thin Membrane Disease

Alport Syndrome and Thin Membrane Disease Alport Syndrome and Thin Membrane Disease Christoph Licht IPNA-ESPN Junior Class 47 th Annual Scientific Meeting of the ESPN Porto, Portugal 20.9.2014 The clinical challenge Alport syndrome: A disease

More information

Elevated Serum Creatinine, a simplified approach

Elevated Serum Creatinine, a simplified approach Elevated Serum Creatinine, a simplified approach Primary Care Update Creighton University School of Medicine. April 27 th, 2018 Disclosure Slide I have no disclosures and have no conflicts with this presentation.

More information

RECURRENT AND DE NOVO RENAL DISEASES IN THE ALLOGRAFT. J. H. Helderman,MD,FACP,FAST

RECURRENT AND DE NOVO RENAL DISEASES IN THE ALLOGRAFT. J. H. Helderman,MD,FACP,FAST RECURRENT AND DE NOVO RENAL DISEASES IN THE ALLOGRAFT J. H. Helderman,MD,FACP,FAST Vanderbilt University Medical Center Professor of Medicine, Pathology and Immunology Medical Director, Vanderbilt Transplant

More information

Long-term follow-up of juvenile acute nonproliferative glomerulitis (JANG)

Long-term follow-up of juvenile acute nonproliferative glomerulitis (JANG) Pediatr Nephrol (2007) 22:1957 1961 DOI 10.1007/s00467-007-0555-6 BRIEF REPORT Long-term follow-up of juvenile acute nonproliferative glomerulitis (JANG) Teruo Fujita & Kandai Nozu & Kazumoto Iijima &

More information

C3 GLOMERULOPATHIES. Budapest Nephrology School Zoltan Laszik

C3 GLOMERULOPATHIES. Budapest Nephrology School Zoltan Laszik C3 GLOMERULOPATHIES Budapest Nephrology School 8.30.2018. Zoltan Laszik 1 Learning Objectives Familiarize with the pathogenetic mechanisms of glomerular diseases Learn the pathologic landscape and clinical

More information

Long term prognosis of recurrent haematuria

Long term prognosis of recurrent haematuria Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1985, 60, 420-425 Long term prognosis of recurrent haematuria P F W MILLER, N I SPEIRS, S R APARICIO, M LENDON, J M SAVAGE, R J POSTLETHWAITE, J T BROCKLEBANK, I B HOUSTON,

More information

What s hiding behind IgA nephropathy?

What s hiding behind IgA nephropathy? What s hiding behind IgA nephropathy? Bauerova L. Department of Pathology, the First Faculty of Medicine and General Hospital, Charles University Prague (nephropathology training: Department of Clinical

More information

Alterations of Renal and Urinary Tract Function

Alterations of Renal and Urinary Tract Function Alterations of Renal and Urinary Tract Function Chapter 29 Urinary Tract Obstruction Urinary tract obstruction is an interference with the flow of urine at any site along the urinary tract The obstruction

More information

NEPHRITIC SYNDROME. By Dr Mai inbiek

NEPHRITIC SYNDROME. By Dr Mai inbiek NEPHRITIC SYNDROME By Dr Mai inbiek Nephritic Syndrome The nephritic Syndrome is a clinical complex, usually of acute onset. Is caused by inflammatory lesions of glomeruli. Characterized by; 1) Hematuria

More information

29th Annual Meeting of the Glomerular Disease Collaborative Network

29th Annual Meeting of the Glomerular Disease Collaborative Network 29th Annual Meeting of the Glomerular Disease Collaborative Network Updates on the Pathogenesis IgA Nephropathy and IgA Vasculitis (HSP) J. Charles Jennette, M.D. Brinkhous Distinguished Professor and

More information

Glomerulonephritis. Dr Rodney Itaki Anatomical Pathology Discipline.

Glomerulonephritis. Dr Rodney Itaki Anatomical Pathology Discipline. Glomerulonephritis Dr Rodney Itaki Anatomical Pathology Discipline. University of Papua New Guinea School of Medicine & Health Sciences Division of Pathology Gross anatomy Ref: Goggle Images Microanatomy

More information

CHAPTER 2. Primary Glomerulonephritis

CHAPTER 2. Primary Glomerulonephritis 2nd Report of the PRIMARY GLOMERULONEPHRITIS CHAPTER 2 Primary Glomerulonephritis Sunita Bavanandan Lee Han Wei Lim Soo Kun 21 PRIMARY GLOMERULONEPHRITIS 2nd Report of the 2.1 Introduction This chapter

More information

ACUTE GLOMERULONEPHRITIS. IAP UG Teaching slides

ACUTE GLOMERULONEPHRITIS. IAP UG Teaching slides ACUTE GLOMERULONEPHRITIS 1 Definition Etiology Pathology/pathogenesis Risk factors Clinical Presentation Investigation Differential Diagnosis Management Outcome/Prognosis Indication for Renal Biopsy Summary

More information

Lab 3, case 1. Is this an example of nephrotic or nephritic syndrome? Why? Which portion of the nephron would you expect to be abnormal?

Lab 3, case 1. Is this an example of nephrotic or nephritic syndrome? Why? Which portion of the nephron would you expect to be abnormal? Lab 3, case 1 12-year-old Costa Rican boy is brought into clinic by his parents because of dark brownish-red urine over the last 24 hours. The family has been visiting friends in Indianapolis for two weeks.

More information

RENAL EVENING SPECIALTY CONFERENCE

RENAL EVENING SPECIALTY CONFERENCE RENAL EVENING SPECIALTY CONFERENCE Harsharan K. Singh, MD The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Disclosure of Relevant Financial Relationships No conflicts of interest to disclose. CLINICAL HISTORY

More information

Renal Disease. Please refer to the assignment page Three online modules TBLs

Renal Disease. Please refer to the assignment page Three online modules TBLs Renal Disease Please refer to the assignment page Three online modules TBLs 1 Renal Embryology 2 Lab Tests UA CBC Enzymes Creatinine Creatinine clearance Ammonia Abs C Bx 3 BUN Creatinine Creatinine Clearance

More information

Mayo Clinic/ RPS Consensus Report on Classification, Diagnosis, and Reporting of Glomerulonephritis

Mayo Clinic/ RPS Consensus Report on Classification, Diagnosis, and Reporting of Glomerulonephritis Mayo Clinic/ RPS Consensus Report on Classification, Diagnosis, and Reporting of Glomerulonephritis Sanjeev Sethi, MD, PhD Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology Disclosure Relevant Financial

More information

CHAPTER 2 PRIMARY GLOMERULONEPHRITIS

CHAPTER 2 PRIMARY GLOMERULONEPHRITIS CHAPTER 2 Sunita Bavanandan Lim Soo Kun 19 5th Report of the 2.1: Introduction This chapter covers the main primary glomerulonephritis that were reported to the MRRB from the years 2005-2012. Minimal change

More information

MICROSCOPIC HEMATURIA AND DIFFUSE NECROTIZING GLOMERULONEPHRITIS

MICROSCOPIC HEMATURIA AND DIFFUSE NECROTIZING GLOMERULONEPHRITIS MICROSCOPIC HEMATURIA AND DIFFUSE NECROTIZING GLOMERULONEPHRITIS Hatim Q. AlMaghrabi, MD, FRCPC Consultant at King Abdulaziz Medical City (NGHA) Jeddah Case Presentation 70 years old female Known hypertensive

More information

What is Alport s Syndrome? Why it is called Alport s Syndrome? What Causes Alport s Syndrome, and differences between men and women?

What is Alport s Syndrome? Why it is called Alport s Syndrome? What Causes Alport s Syndrome, and differences between men and women? ALPORT S SYNDROME What is Alport s Syndrome? Why is it called Alport s Syndrome? What causes Alport s Syndrome? How is Alport s Syndrome diagnosed? Is Alport s Syndrome common? Is there any treatment to

More information

Dr Ian Roberts Oxford. Oxford Pathology Course 2010 for FRCPath Illustration-Cellular Pathology. Oxford Radcliffe NHS Trust

Dr Ian Roberts Oxford. Oxford Pathology Course 2010 for FRCPath Illustration-Cellular Pathology. Oxford Radcliffe NHS Trust Dr Ian Roberts Oxford Oxford Pathology Course 2010 for FRCPath Plan of attack: Diagnostic approach to the renal biopsy Differential diagnosis of the clinical syndromes of renal disease Microscopy Step

More information

Examination by dipstick: (Orthotoluidine & organic peroxidase) Hemoglobin free in urine. Hemoglobin from red blood cells in urine.

Examination by dipstick: (Orthotoluidine & organic peroxidase) Hemoglobin free in urine. Hemoglobin from red blood cells in urine. Examination by dipstick: (Orthotoluidine & organic peroxidase) Hemoglobin free in urine Hemoglobin from red blood cells in urine Myoglobin Normal erythrocyte excretion rate * 0 425.000/12 h. ( mean 65.750

More information

AN APPROACH TO HEMATURIA. Dr Saima Ali

AN APPROACH TO HEMATURIA. Dr Saima Ali AN APPROACH TO HEMATURIA Dr Saima Ali Definition Microscopic hematuria hematuria is defined as the presence of 5 or more RBCs per high-power field in 3 of 3 consecutive centrifuged specimens obtained at

More information

Recurrent Idiopathic Membranous Glomerulonephritis After Kidney Transplantation and Successful Treatment With Rituximab

Recurrent Idiopathic Membranous Glomerulonephritis After Kidney Transplantation and Successful Treatment With Rituximab TRANSPLANTATION Recurrent Idiopathic Membranous Glomerulonephritis After Kidney Transplantation and Successful Treatment With Rituximab Khadijeh Makhdoomi, 1,2 Saeed Abkhiz, 1,2 Farahnaz Noroozinia, 1,3

More information

Approach to Glomerular Diseases: Clinical Presentation Nephrotic Syndrome Nephritis

Approach to Glomerular Diseases: Clinical Presentation Nephrotic Syndrome Nephritis GLOMERULONEPHRITIDES Vivette D Agati Jai Radhakrishnan Approach to Glomerular Diseases: Clinical Presentation Nephrotic Syndrome Nephritis Heavy Proteinuria Renal failure Low serum Albumin Hypertension

More information

Functions of the kidney:

Functions of the kidney: Diseases of renal system : Normal anatomy of renal system : Each human adult kidney weighs about 150 gm, the ureter enters the kidney at the hilum, it dilates into a funnel-shaped cavity, the pelvis, from

More information

H(a)ematuria. FX Keeley Consultant Urologist Bristol Urological Institute

H(a)ematuria. FX Keeley Consultant Urologist Bristol Urological Institute H(a)ematuria FX Keeley Consultant Urologist Bristol Urological Institute From Philadelphia to Bristol, England Southmead Hospital, 1916 Southmead Hospital, 2013 Southmead Hospital, 2014 H(a)ematuria Blood

More information

DIABETES MELLITUS. Kidney in systemic diseases. Slower the progression: Pathology: Patients with diabetes mellitus are prone to other renal diseases:

DIABETES MELLITUS. Kidney in systemic diseases. Slower the progression: Pathology: Patients with diabetes mellitus are prone to other renal diseases: Kidney in systemic diseases Dr. Badri Paudel The kidneys may be directly involved in a number of multisystem diseases or secondarily affected by diseases of other organs. Involvement may be at a prerenal,

More information

Dr. Rai Muhammad Asghar Head of Paediatric Department BBH Rawalpindi

Dr. Rai Muhammad Asghar Head of Paediatric Department BBH Rawalpindi Dr. Rai Muhammad Asghar Head of Paediatric Department BBH Rawalpindi Acute Post streptococcal Glomerulonephritis Sudden onset of Gross hematuria Edema Hypertension Renal insufficiency Cause of AGN Post

More information

Nephrotic syndrome minimal change disease vs. IgA nephropathy. Hadar Meringer Internal medicine B Sheba

Nephrotic syndrome minimal change disease vs. IgA nephropathy. Hadar Meringer Internal medicine B Sheba Nephrotic syndrome minimal change disease vs. IgA nephropathy Hadar Meringer Internal medicine B Sheba The Case 29 year old man diagnosed with nephrotic syndrome 2 weeks ago and complaining now about Lt.flank

More information

Index. electron microscopy, 81 immunofluorescence microscopy, 80 light microscopy, 80 Amyloidosis clinical setting, 185 etiology/pathogenesis,

Index. electron microscopy, 81 immunofluorescence microscopy, 80 light microscopy, 80 Amyloidosis clinical setting, 185 etiology/pathogenesis, A Acute antibody-mediated rejection (Acute AMR) clinical features, 203 clinicopathologic correlations, 206 pathogenesis, 205 206 204 205 light microscopy, 203 204 Acute cellular rejection (ACR) clinical

More information

NIH Public Access Author Manuscript Kidney Int. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2011 September 1.

NIH Public Access Author Manuscript Kidney Int. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2011 September 1. NIH Public Access Author Manuscript Published in final edited form as: Kidney Int. 2011 March ; 79(6): 691 692. doi:10.1038/ki.2010.514. The case: Familial occurrence of retinitis pigmentosa, deafness

More information

Acute Kidney Injury. I. David Weiner, M.D. Division of Nephrology, Hypertension and Transplantation University of Florida and NF/SGVHS

Acute Kidney Injury. I. David Weiner, M.D. Division of Nephrology, Hypertension and Transplantation University of Florida and NF/SGVHS Acute Kidney Injury I. David Weiner, M.D. Division of Nephrology, Hypertension and Transplantation University of Florida and NF/SGVHS 374-6102 David.Weiner@medicine.ufl.edu www.renallectures.com Concentration

More information

Case Report A Case of Proliferative Glomerulonephritis with Monoclonal IgG Deposits That Showed Predominantly Membranous Features

Case Report A Case of Proliferative Glomerulonephritis with Monoclonal IgG Deposits That Showed Predominantly Membranous Features Hindawi Case Reports in Nephrology Volume 2017, Article ID 1027376, 5 pages https://doi.org/10.1155/2017/1027376 Case Report A Case of Proliferative Glomerulonephritis with Monoclonal IgG Deposits That

More information

The principal characteristics of some of the more common heredofamilial

The principal characteristics of some of the more common heredofamilial Heredofamilial and Congenital Glomerular Disorders rthur H. Cohen Richard J. Glassock The principal characteristics of some of the more common heredofamilial and congenital glomerular disorders are described

More information

Clinical and pathological characteristics of patients with glomerular diseases at a university teaching hospital: 5-year prospective review

Clinical and pathological characteristics of patients with glomerular diseases at a university teaching hospital: 5-year prospective review Clinical and pathological characteristics of patients with glomerular diseases at a university teaching hospital: 5-year prospective review KW Chan, TM Chan, IKP Cheng Objective. To examine the prevalence

More information

Diabetic Nephropathy

Diabetic Nephropathy Diabetic Nephropathy Outline Introduction of diabetic nephropathy Manifestations of diabetic nephropathy Staging of diabetic nephropathy Microalbuminuria Diagnosis of diabetic nephropathy Treatment of

More information

Sugars and immune complex formation in IgA

Sugars and immune complex formation in IgA Glomerular disease Sugars and immune complex formation in IgA nephropathy Jonathan Barratt and Frank Eitner In vitro evidence suggests that immune complex formation in IgA nephropathy is determined by

More information

Immune complex deposits in ANCA-associated crescentic glomerulonephritis: A study of 126 cases

Immune complex deposits in ANCA-associated crescentic glomerulonephritis: A study of 126 cases Kidney International, Vol. 65 (2004), pp. 2145 2152 Immune complex deposits in ANCA-associated crescentic glomerulonephritis: A study of 126 cases MARK HAAS and JOSEPH A. EUSTACE Department of Pathology

More information

Light and electron microscopical studies of focal glomerular sclerosis

Light and electron microscopical studies of focal glomerular sclerosis J. clin. Path., 1971, 24, 846-850 Light and electron microscopical studies of focal glomerular sclerosis A. H. NAGI, F. ALEXANDER, AND R. LANNIGAN From the Department of Pathology, Queen's University of

More information

Hereditary nephritis associated with low-tone. sensorineural hearing difficulty :A case report

Hereditary nephritis associated with low-tone. sensorineural hearing difficulty :A case report Hereditary nephritis associated with low-tone sensorineural hearing difficulty :A case report Medicine, and ***Second Department Pathology, Toho University School Medicine, Tokyo, Japan ****Department

More information

Proteinuria (Protein in the Urine) Basics

Proteinuria (Protein in the Urine) Basics Proteinuria (Protein in the Urine) Basics OVERVIEW Proteinuria is the medical term for protein in the urine Urinary protein is detected by urine dipstick analysis, urinary protein: creatinine ratio (UP:C

More information

THE KIDNEY AND SLE LUPUS NEPHRITIS

THE KIDNEY AND SLE LUPUS NEPHRITIS THE KIDNEY AND SLE LUPUS NEPHRITIS JACK WATERMAN DO FACOI 2013 NEPHROLOGY SIR RICHARD BRIGHT TERMINOLOGY RENAL INSUFFICIENCY CKD (CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASE) ESRD (ENDSTAGE RENAL DISEASE) GLOMERULONEPHRITIS

More information

CASE 3 AN UNUSUAL CASE OF NEPHROTIC SYNDROME

CASE 3 AN UNUSUAL CASE OF NEPHROTIC SYNDROME CASE 3 AN UNUSUAL CASE OF NEPHROTIC SYNDROME Dr Seethalekshmy N.V., Dr.Annie Jojo, Dr Hiran K.R., Amrita institute of Medical Sciences, Kochi, Kerala Case history 34 year old gentleman Nephrotic range

More information

CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASE (CKD)

CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASE (CKD) CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASE (CKD) CKD implies longstanding (more than 3 months), and usually progressive, impairment in renal function. In many instances, no effective means are available to reverse the primary

More information

substance staining with IgG, C3 and IgA (trace) Linear deposition of IgG(+), IgA.M(trace) and C3(+++) at the DEJ

substance staining with IgG, C3 and IgA (trace) Linear deposition of IgG(+), IgA.M(trace) and C3(+++) at the DEJ Direct Immunofluorescence: Skin Diagnosis Findings Picture Pemphigus Vulgaris and it s Intracellular cement variants substance staining with IgG, C3 and IgA (trace) Bullous Pemphigoid and it s variants

More information

A Simpli ed Method for Measuring the Thickness of Glomerular Basement Membranes

A Simpli ed Method for Measuring the Thickness of Glomerular Basement Membranes Ultrastructural Pathology, 27:409 416, 2003 Copyright # Taylor & Francis Inc. ISSN: 0191-3123 print/1521-0758 online DOI: 10.1080/01913120390248728 A Simpli ed Method for Measuring the Thickness of Glomerular

More information

J Nephropharmacol. 2014; 3(2): Journal of Nephropharmacology

J Nephropharmacol. 2014; 3(2): Journal of Nephropharmacology J Nephropharmacol. 2014; 3(2): 33 37. NPJ Journal of Nephropharmacology Pathological patterns of mesangioproliferative glomerulonephritis seen at a tertiary care center Ghadeer A. Mokhtar 1*, Sawsan Jalalah

More information

Immune profile of IgA-dominant diffuse proliferative glomerulonephritis

Immune profile of IgA-dominant diffuse proliferative glomerulonephritis Clin Kidney J (2014) 7: 479 483 doi: 10.1093/ckj/sfu090 Exceptional Case Immune profile of IgA-dominant diffuse proliferative glomerulonephritis Eric Wallace 1, Nicolas Maillard 2, Hiroyuki Ueda 2, Stacy

More information

USRDS UNITED STATES RENAL DATA SYSTEM

USRDS UNITED STATES RENAL DATA SYSTEM USRDS UNITED STATES RENAL DATA SYSTEM Chapter 8: Pediatric ESRD 1,462 children in the United States began end-stage renal disease (ESRD) care in 2013. 9,921 children were being treated for ESRD on December

More information

Dr Ian Roberts Oxford

Dr Ian Roberts Oxford Dr Ian Roberts Oxford Oxford Pathology Course 2010 for FRCPath Present the basic diagnostic features of the commonest conditions causing renal failure Highlight diagnostic pitfalls. Crescentic GN: renal

More information

Classification of Glomerular Diseases and Defining Individual Glomerular Lesions: Developing International Consensus

Classification of Glomerular Diseases and Defining Individual Glomerular Lesions: Developing International Consensus Classification of Glomerular Diseases and Defining Individual Glomerular Lesions: Developing International Consensus Mark Haas MD, PhD Department of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine Cedars-Sinai Medical

More information

Hemizygous Fabry disease associated with IgA nephropathy: A case report

Hemizygous Fabry disease associated with IgA nephropathy: A case report 1 Hemizygous Fabry disease associated with IgA nephropathy: A case report Fabry disease and IgA nephropathy Homare Shimohata 1, 3, Keigyou Yoh 1, Kenji Takada 2, Hiroaki Tanaka 2, Joichi Usui 1, Kouichi

More information

Case # 2 3/27/2017. Disclosure of Relevant Financial Relationships. Clinical history. Clinical history. Laboratory findings

Case # 2 3/27/2017. Disclosure of Relevant Financial Relationships. Clinical history. Clinical history. Laboratory findings Case # 2 Christopher Larsen, MD Arkana Laboratories Disclosure of Relevant Financial Relationships USCAP requires that all planners (Education Committee) in a position to influence or control the content

More information

Examination of the light microscopic slide of renal biopsy specimens by utilizing Low-vacuum scanning electron microscope

Examination of the light microscopic slide of renal biopsy specimens by utilizing Low-vacuum scanning electron microscope SCIENTIFIC INSTRUMENT NEWS 2017 Vol. 9 SEPTEMBER Technical magazine of Electron Microscope and Analytical Instruments. Article Examination of the light microscopic slide of renal biopsy specimens by utilizing

More information