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KIDNEY LECTURE 2010.2 Glomerular diseases Glomerular structure • Arterioles • Capillaries • Mesangium (“between capillaries”) • Urinary space surrounds glomerulus within Bowman’s capsule Glomerular structure - Mesangium • • • • Between capillaries Mesangial cells & matrix Supporting framework Cell proliferation, produce matrix • Contractile - directs local capillary blood flow • Phagocytosis • Cytokines - IL-1 Flow and filtration in glomerulus • Blood enters by afferent arteriole -> capillary loops and exits by efferent arteriole • From blood in capillaries water & small solutes (<70,000 kD) are freely filtered into urinary space • This early urine -> PCT and to rest of nephron Glomerular capillary filter N.B. most blood in capillaries returns to the circulation FP EPI GBM Nephrin EN RBC • Blood in capillary lumen • Part of endothelial cell with fenestrae (E N) • Glomerular Basement Membrane (GBM) • Epithelial cell foot processes (FP) – Filtration slits, slit diaphragms & nephrin between FP • Urinary space Normal glomerular filtration • Filtration is relatively selective: • Size - water, small solutes < 70,000kD • Charge - GBM region is anionic e.g. GBM heparan sulphate, epithel and endothel cell membrane glycoproteins - thus, cationic molecules are more easily filtered • Nephrin in slit diaphragms helps maintain integrity of filter. Nephrin mutation -> plasma proteins leak through GBM and proteinuria. Other FP proteins also. • (Protein conformation) Pathogenesis of glomerular disease • Immunologically mediated – A. Immune complex (commonest; antigen often unknown) – B. Anti-GBM (rare) – C. Other immune mechanisms: • Activated T cells • “pauci-immune” • Non-immune - metabolic, vascular, hereditary, other • Glomerular injury caused by – Complement + neutrophils, macrophages, O2 spec, etc – Complement + membrane attack complex (C5-C9) -> lysis – Cytotoxic antibodies, cytokines, O2 species, AA metabs, N Oxide from glomerular or inflammatory cells; fibrin; PDGF, TGF b Immune complexes • Immune complexes are granular deposits (immunofluorescence) * • Electron dense deposits* (EM) • GBM or mesangial Anti-GBM antibodies • Linear fluorescence continuously along GBM • Not seen on EM Two signs of glomerular disease haematuria & proteinuria • Haematuria – – – – RBCs in urine - microscopic and / or macroscopic (Normal GBM impermeable to RBCs, and no RBCs in urine) In certain glomerular diseases, RBCs -> breaks in GBM (Other causes e.g. bladder, renal carcinoma) • Proteinuria – GBM, epithelial cell injury, (nephrin mutation, altered FP proteins) – Loss of GBM negative charge, loss of foot processes – (Dipstick); 24 hour urine collection Nephrotic syndrome, nephrotic-range proteinuria Caused by excessive glomerular permeability to protein - no protein in normal urine Nephrotic syndrome Proteinuria >3.5gm / 24 hrs Hypoalbuminemia Oedema - ankles, peiorbital, etc Hyperlipidemia (low albumin -> incr liver synthesis of LDL, VLDL, and less breakdown of lipoproteins) Glomerular diseases • • • • In children, are usually primary - kidney only Adults - primary or secondary glomerular disease Diagnosis: combines clinical, serology, and pathology Renal biopsy – Light microscopy - LM – Immunofluorescence microscopy - FM – Electron microscopy - EM • Types of glomerular disease are descriptive: membranous, minimal change disease, IgA nephropathy IgA nephropathy • Mesangial cell proliferation • IgA immune complex deposits in mesangium, • EM deposits IgA IgA nephropathy • • • • • Commonest glomerular disease worldwide Children, young adults M:F = 3:1 Haematuria 1-2 days after (recurrent) respiratory infection Proteinuria variable; serum IgA increased IgA immune complex deposits in mesangium, mesangial cell proliferation – Inability to regulate mucosal IgA synthesis and clearance in response to viral, bacterial or food antigens – Alternate complement pathway - no C1q, C4 – Coeliac disease, dermatitis herpetiformis, liver disease • Chronic course overall - 40% need dialysis, transplant at 10 yrs Minimal Change Disease • Glomeruli normal on LM • EM loss of foot processes Minimal Change Disease • • • • Young children; nephrotic syndrome Highly selective proteinuria Normal glomeruli by LM, FM Loss of foot processes on EM – ? Factor secreted by T cells e.g. IL-8, TNF that reverses GBM anionic charge by inhibiting nephrin synthesis – Nephrin gene mutations in congenital nephrotic syndrome • Responds to steroids: good prognosis Membranous Glomerulonephritis • Commonest primary glomerular cause of proteinuria / nephrotic syndrome in adults; 30-50 yrs • Classic chronic immune complex disease • Thick GBMembrane - LM • Imm Complex dense deposits and “spikes” on EM • Fluorescent IC deposits on outer GBM Membranous GN Membranous GN • EM deposits outer GBM – Deposits dark, spikes pale IgG • FM Granular GBM deposits of IgG; also C’3 Membranous GN • Many known antigens – Drugs, SLE, tumours, hepatitis B, but usually idiopathic – Immune complexes deposited on GBM or form in situ to intrinsic antigen – C5-C9 Membrane attack complex activates mesangial and endothelial cells -> O2 species -> protein leakage – *NEJMed July 2 2009: Phospholipase A(2) Receptor and PLA(2) R Autoantibodies in 70% patients with idiopathic MGN – PLA(2) R found in normal podocytes and also in MGN immune complexes; mostly IgG4 autoantibodies • Chronic renal failure and dialysis in 40% at 20 yrs; also spontaneous remissions in 10-30%. – Rx is controversial because clinical course so variable