The Japanese Journal of Nephrology
Online ISSN : 1884-0728
Print ISSN : 0385-2385
ISSN-L : 0385-2385
An electron microscopic study of circumferential mesangial interposition in various renal diseases
Yuuichiro MARUYAMA
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1998 Volume 40 Issue 4 Pages 263-275

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Abstract
It has been reported that circumferential mesangial interposition (CMI) is an important mor phological feature suggesting the progression of glomerulosclerosis in glomerular disease. The relation between CMI and its associated lesions was investigated in various renal diseases by electron microscopy. In 276 patients, of whom the glomeruli were observed by electron microscopy, CMI was observed non-specifically in 48 patients with various glomerular diseases (IgA nephropathy, 11; non-IgA glomerulone phritis, 1 ; membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis, 8;membranous nephropathy, 5;lupus glomer ulonephritis, 12;toxemia of pregnancy, 2;diabetic nephropathy, 7;mitomycin nephropathy, 1;and Seckel's dwarfism patients, 1). The glomeruli with CMI showed a marked increase in mesangial matrix, as well as various grades of mesangial cell proliferation. Mesangiolysis associated with subendothelial widening was observed in a lesion of CMI in most cases . This phenomenon appears to be an initial alteration that conducts proliferated cells to the peripheral portion of a capillary loop. Localized severe thinning of the glomerular basement membrane was frequently combined with CMI, particularly in IgA nephropathy patients. Endothelial cells were occasionally interposed into the widened subendothelial space . Subendothelial deposits were noticed in the CMI lesion, particularly in MPGN patients. In conclusion, in the process of glomerulosclerosis progression in various glomerular diseases, lytic and edematous changes initially occur in the mesangao-subendothelial system (mesangiolysis and suben dothelial widening), then proliferating mesangial cells extend into the widened space (between GBM and endothelial cells), and reach the peripheral portion of a capillary loop.
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