The Japanese Journal of Nephrology
Online ISSN : 1884-0728
Print ISSN : 0385-2385
ISSN-L : 0385-2385
Clinicopathological study on progressive hereditary nephritis: Observations of ultrastructural lesions in the glomerular basement membrane
REIKO YOSHIDA
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1992 Volume 34 Issue 11 Pages 1135-1148

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Abstract

Four boys and six girls with progressive hereditary nephritis were studied clinicopathol-ogically. Renal biopsy was performed 16 times in ten cases. Mean age at renal biopsy was 7.3 years old (range 2 to 14 years old). The obtained results were as follows: (1) Montages of electron micrographs were prepared to complete one whole glomerulus. The length of the glomerular basement membrane (GBM) with the characteristic splitting of the lamina densa (Reticulation) was measured and expressed as a percentage of the total length of the GBM. The range of the percentage of the GBM with Reticulation was from 2 to 43% (13.4±10.0%, mean±SD, n=16). In 4 cases of the 5 cases performed serial renal biopsy, the percentage of the GBM with Reticulation at the 2nd biopsy increased compared with the 1st one. (2) Protein excretion in the urine, serum albumin, α 2-globulin, fibrinogen and total cholesterol showed the correlation with the percentage of the GBM with Reticulation. (3) Incomplete ruptures (deep invasion of the epithelial cells into the thickened GBM with Reticulation) were obserbed. Those suggested that the GBM became fragile associated with the expansion of Reticulation and finally ruptured. Gaps of the GBM were obserbed 0 to 3 per in one glomerulus (0 to 1.87 per lmm GBM) and the serial biopsies showed an increase in the number of the gaps as time passed. (4) This study showed the increase in factors activating the blood coagulation such as total cholesterol and fibrinogen, with the expansion of the GBM with Reticulation. And in a nephrotic case, fibrin strands were observed in the glomerular capillary loops and in the GBM. These findings suggest that the activation of the blood coagulation plays a role for the damage of the glomeruli in progressive hereditary nephritis.

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