Glomerular pathology in systemic disease

Similar documents
A clinical syndrome, composed mainly of:

Histopathology: Glomerulonephritis and other renal pathology

Year 2004 Paper one: Questions supplied by Megan

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

Glomerular diseases mostly presenting with Nephritic syndrome

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

Approach to Glomerular Diseases: Clinical Presentation Nephrotic Syndrome Nephritis

Overview of glomerular diseases

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

RENAL HISTOPATHOLOGY

NEPHRITIC SYNDROME. By Dr Mai inbiek

CHAPTER 2. Primary Glomerulonephritis

Crescentic Glomerulonephritis (RPGN)

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

C1q nephropathy the Diverse Disease

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

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

Surgical Pathology Report

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

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

29 Glomerular disease: an overview

Membranoproliferative Glomerulonephritis

THE URINARY SYSTEM. The cases we will cover are:

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

THE URINARY SYSTEM. The cases we will cover are:

Dr. Rai Muhammad Asghar Head of Paediatric Department BBH Rawalpindi

Dr Ian Roberts Oxford

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

ESRD Dialysis Prevalence - One Year Statistics

CHAPTER 2 PRIMARY GLOMERULONEPHRITIS

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

Glomerulonephritis. Dr Rodney Itaki Anatomical Pathology Discipline.

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

PATTERNS OF RENAL INJURY

Interesting case seminar: Native kidneys Case Report:

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?

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

Nephritic vs. Nephrotic Syndrome

ACUTE GLOMERULONEPHRITIS. IAP UG Teaching slides

CASE 4 A RARE CASE OF INTRALUMINAL GLOMERULAR CAPILLARY DEPOSITS

Glomerular diseases with organized deposits

29th Annual Meeting of the Glomerular Disease Collaborative Network

Secondary IgA Nephropathy & HSP

Diabetic Nephropathy. Introduction/Clinical Setting. Pathologic Findings Light Microscopy. J. Charles Jennette

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

Glomerular Diseases. Anna Vinnikova, MD Nephrology

INTRODUCTION TO GLOMERULAR DISEASES

RECURRENT AND DE NOVO RENAL DISEASES IN THE ALLOGRAFT

Urinalysis and Body Fluids CRg. Urine Casts. Microscopic Sediment Casts. Unit 2; Session 6

MLS Continuing Education Conference November PACE Session # Urinary Casts: The Importance of Laboratory Identification

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

Elevated Serum Creatinine, a simplified approach

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

Some renal vascular disorders

SCOTTISH REAL BIOPSY REGISTRY: SURVEY OF NATIVE KIDNEY BIOPSY IN SCOTLAND 2015

Segmental glomerulonephritis

GLOMERULAR DISEASES. Dr. de Châtel Rudolf. Semmelweis Egyetem ÁOK, I.Sz.Belgyógyászati Klinika, Budapest

Dr P Sigwadi 30 May 2012

Histopathology: Hypertension and diabetes in the kidney These presentations are to help you identify basic histopathological features.

Diseases of the Kidney. Janos Vasko

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

C3 GLOMERULOPATHIES. Budapest Nephrology School Zoltan Laszik

GLOMERULAR TUBULAR/INTERSTITIAL BLOOD VESSELS

Glomerular Diseases. Davis Massey, MD, PhD Surgical Pathology Anna Vinnikova, MD Nephrology

Dr. Ghadeer Mokhtar Consultant pathologists and nephropathologist, KAU

Alterations of Renal and Urinary Tract Function

Chapter 1. Incidence of End Stage Kidney Disease. Contents:

Renal Complications of Bacterial Endocarditis Masashi Narita, M.D.

Multiple Myeloma Advances for clinical pathologists & histopathologists

Proteinuria. Louisiana State University

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

Guideline on the clinical management of Henoch Schonlein Purpura (HSP)

FIBRILLARY GLOMERULONEPHRITIS DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA, PITFALLS, AND DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS

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

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

INTRODUCTION TO GLOMERULAR DISEASES

AN APPROACH TO HEMATURIA. Dr Saima Ali

PATHOLOGY OF THE URINARY SYSTEM Dr. Ameer Dhahir Part one

NEPHROTIC SYNDROME. Presents with the classic tetrad of nephrotic syndrome. Massive proteinuria (>3. 5 g/d) Hypoalbuminemia Edema Hyperlipidemia

HENOCH SCHÖNLEIN PURPURA (VASCULAR PURPURA, ANAPHYLACTOID PURPURA) IN CHILDREN Single choice tests (SC)

Fundamentals of Renal Pathology

Section Title. Subject Index

Dhanalakshmi.R II yr MD Stanley medical college

Light-Chain Mediated Acute Tubular Interstitial Nephritis. A Poorly Recognized Pattern of Renal Disease in Patients With Plasma Cell Dyscrasia

RENAL BIOPSIES in patients with the clinical

An unusual association between focal segmental sclerosis and lupus nephritis: a distinct concept from lupus podocytopathy?

Mr. I.K 58 years old

CHAPTER 4. Paediatric Renal Biopsies

UGS Mid. Anatomy: anatomy physio. patho Micro Pharma Biochem

Atypical IgA Nephropathy

Vasculitis (Polyarteritis Nodosa, Microscopic Polyangiitis, Wegener s Granulomatosis, Henoch- Schönlein Purpura)

Histological features of the nephrotic syndrome

Henoch Schonlein Purpura

Many patients receiving renal allografts become identified simply

RENAL EVENING SPECIALTY CONFERENCE

Journal of Nephropathology

Glomerulonephritis Associated with Bacterial Infection

Pathology of endocrine pancreas. By: Shifaa Alqa qa

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

Transcription:

Glomerular pathology in systemic disease

Lecture outline Lupus nephritis Diabetic nephropathy Glomerulonephritis Associated with Bacterial Endocarditis and Other Systemic Infections Henoch-Schonlein Purpura

Lupus nephritis Kidney involvement is one of the most important clinical features of SLE renal failure is the most common cause of death Mainly glomerular changes interstitial and tubular changes are also seen Pathogenesis: deposition of DNA anti-dna complexes within the glomeruli Although the kidney appears normal by light microscopy in 25% to 30% of cases, almost all cases of SLE show some renal abnormality if examined by immunofluorescence and electron microscopy

6 patterns of glomerular disease in SLE none of which is specific to the disease Minimal mesangial lupus nephritis (class I) Mesangial proliferative lupus nephritis (class II) Focal lupus nephritis (class III) Diffuse lupus nephritis (class IV) Membranous lupus nephritis (class V) Advanced sclerosing lupus nephritis (class VI)

Class I: -LM is normal -mesangial deposits Class IV: -the most serious form -most common class 35-60% of patients ->=50% of glomeruli are involved -most affected patients have hematuria with moderate to severe proteinuria, hypertension, and renal insufficiency Class II: -10-25% of the cases -mild clinical symptoms -Immune complexes deposit in the mesangium -mild to moderate increase in the mesangial matrix and cellularity Class III: -20-35% of the cases -changes in <50% of the glomeruli -changes are segmental or global -the clinical presentation may range from only mild microscopic hematuria and proteinuria to a more active urinary sediment with red blood cell casts and acute, severe renal insufficiency Especially class III & IV: the deposits are subendothelial, subepithelial & mesangial endocapillary proliferation is present if extensive subendothelial immune complexes: wire loops may also: extracapillary proliferation (=crescents) *wire loops, crescents, fibrin thrombi, and necrosis are called here: active lesions Class V: -10-15% -diffuse GBM thickening mainly subepithelial deposits -the same picture as idiopathic membranous nephropathy -almost always have severe proteinuria with overt nephrotic syndrome Class VI: complete sclerosis of greater than 90% of glomeruli and corresponds to clinical end stage renal disease

Diabetic nephropathy Renal failure is second only to myocardial infarction as a cause of death from this disease 3 major lesions: 1-Glomerular lesions 2-Renal vascular lesions, especially: arteriolosclerosis 3-Pyelonephritis, including necrotizing papillitis

Diabetic nephropathy, glomerular lesions Capillary basement membrane thickening can be detected by electron microscopy within a few years of the onset of diabetes, sometimes without any associated change in renal function Diffuse mesangial sclerosis Nodular glomerulosclerosis

Diabetic nephropathy, diffuse mesangial sclerosis Diffuse increase in mesangial matrix along with mesangial cell proliferation always associated with basement membrane thickening found in most individuals with disease of more than 10 years duration if become marked: nephrotic syndrome

Diabetic nephropathy, nodular glomerulosclerosis Ball-like deposits of a laminated matrix situated in the periphery of the glomerulus these nodules are PAS-positive and usually contain trapped mesangial cells = Kimmelstiel-Wilson lesion 15-30% of persons with long-term diabetes

Important note for differential diagnosis Diffuse mesangial sclerosis also may be seen in association with old age and hypertension but: the nodular form of glomerulosclerosis, once certain unusual forms of nephropathies have been excluded is essentially pathognomonic of diabetes

Both the diffuse and the nodular forms of glomerulosclerosis can cause:

Diabetic nephropathy, renal atherosclerosis and arteriolosclerosis These are macrovascular manifestations of the disease Hyaline arteriolosclerosis of afferent & efferent arterioles important to differentiate diabetic cause from other causes

Diabetic nephropathy, pyelonephritis More common & more severe in diabetics than in nondiabetics One special pattern of acute pyelonephritis, necrotizing papillitis (or papillary necrosis), is much more prevalent in diabetics than in nondiabetics

Glomerulonephritis associated with bacterial endocarditis and other systemic infections Immune complex nephritis initiated by complexes of bacterial antigen and antibody Hematuria and proteinuria of various degrees Acute nephritic presentation is not uncommon RPGN may occur in rare instances The histologic features may vary from a focal and segmental necrotizing glomerulonephritis to a diffuse and more global exudative and proliferative glomerulonephritis, which may have a MPGN pattern The rapidly progressive forms show large numbers of crescents

Henoch-Schonlein purpura A childhood (3-8 years old) syndrome, composed of: -purpuric skin lesions extensor surfaces of arms and legs as well as buttocks -abdominal pain and intestinal bleeding -arthralgias -renal abnormalities 1/3 of patients gross or microscopic hematuria, nephritic syndrome, nephrotic syndrome, or some combination of these in a small number of patients, mostly adults: RPGN Vasculitis occurs in other organs, such as the skin (with deposits of IgA, along with IgG and C3 in these vessels) & gastrointestinal tract, but is rare in the kidney Glomerular deposition of Ag-Ab complexes is the same as IgA nephropathy IgA nephropathy and Henoch- Schonlein purpura are manifestations of the same disease

MM, renal dysfunction is a common, serious problem in myeloma Mostly due to obstructive proteinaceous casts, which often form in the distal convoluted tubules and the collecting ducts The casts consist mostly of Bence Jones proteins along with variable amounts of complete immunoglobulins, Tamm-Horsfall protein, and albumin Light chain deposition in the glomeruli or the interstitium either as amyloid or linear deposits also may contribute to renal dysfunction

MM, renal dysfunction, cont d Hypercalcemia, which may lead to dehydration and renal stones Frequent bouts of bacterial pyelonephritis, which stem in part from the hypogammaglobulinemia

MM, clinical manifestations