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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (
immunodeficiency
)
71,517
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In 1986, Weiss et al reported a group of patients with nephrotic syndrome, progressive chronic renal failure, and the histopathologic features of glomerular capillary collapse. Similar lesions are often described in human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) nephropathy. We evaluated 893 consecutive nontransplant renal biopsies performed in our department and the follow-up of the patients at our outpatient service. Sixteen specimens were identified with the pathological features of collapsing
glomerulopathy
(focal segmental or global glomerular capillary collapse and visceral epithelial cell hyperplasia), with no evidence of HIV infection and/or intravenous drug abuse. Their clinical characteristics were analyzed and compared with a group of 29 patients with noncollapsing focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS). The follow-up period of both patient groups was 5 +/- 1.46 years. The Kaplan-Meier life table method was used to present survival of the patients. The age of both groups was similar, 34 +/- 4 years (mean +/- standard error of the mean) for patients with collapsing
glomerulopathy
and 35 +/- 3 years for those with FSGS. The serum creatinine level was greater in patients with collapsing
glomerulopathy
(183 +/- 31 micromol/L) compared with those with FSGS (115 +/- 18 micromol/L), but the difference was not significant (P = 0.0504). The difference in proteinuria was not significant (P = 0.7668); it was 5.83 +/- 0.74 g/d in patients with collapsing
glomerulopathy
and 5.42 +/- 0.84 g/d in those with focal sclerosing glomerulonephritis. The difference in systolic (P = 0.4) and diastolic blood pressure (P = 0.556) was also not significant. Survival of the patients with collapsing
glomerulopathy
was worse than that of patients with FSGS (P = 0.025). Renal function survived 5 years in 40% of the patients with FSGS, but patients with collapsing
glomerulopathy
had no renal function survival. Our data suggest that idiopathic collapsing
glomerulopathy
is a distinct clinicopathologic entity with similar clinical features to focal sclerosing glomerulonephritis, but a worse prognosis and a rapidly progressive course toward end-stage renal disease.
...
PMID:Collapsing glomerulopathy: clinical characteristics and follow-up. 1019 29
Idiopathic collapsing
glomerulopathy
(ICG) is a clinically and pathologically distinct variant of focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, characterized clinically by rapid progression of renal insufficiency, a male and African-American racial predominance, and pathologically by segmental glomerular collapse, visceral epithelial cell hypertrophy and hyperplasia, and the absence of endothelial tubuloreticular inclusions. Pathologically similar lesions have been reported in adult and pediatric patients with human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) infection and/or intravenous (IV) drug abuse. Most patients with ICG who have been reported in the literature are adults. Six children with ICG were retrospectively identified (two from East Carolina University, four from University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill). Clinical data and renal biopsy findings were reviewed for all patients. All six patients were male; five African-American and one Hispanic. Ages ranged from 2 to 17 years (mean 12 years). Steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome was the presenting clinical finding. Average 24-h urine protein excretion was 6.3 g (range 3.2-15 g). Five patients were serologically negative for HIV infection (one patient not tested) and none had a history of IV drug abuse or known HIV risk factors. Progression to end-stage renal insufficiency in two patients within 1 year of biopsy required renal transplantation, and within 1 month of biopsy one patient required dialysis. We report a series of pediatric patients with ICG, an aggressive variant of focal segmental glomerulosclerosis. ICG in children is similar clinically and pathologically to this disease in adult patients.
...
PMID:Idiopathic collapsing glomerulopathy in children. 1068 63
Cytomegalovirus (CMV) has a prominent position as the cause of severe cytomegalovirus infection (CMVI) in immunocompromised persons, such as: patients with primary or secondary
immunodeficiency
(risk group), blood/hemoproducts recipients, especially recipients of tissue and organ transplants, which have implications for difficult providing of CMV-seronegative (safe) blood. However, CMV-disease is manifested in the minority of immunocompetent persons. Sera of patients from the Center for Hemodialysis of the Clinic of Nephrology of the Military Medical Academy (MMA) were tested on the presence of CMVI markers. All patients belonged to the risk group considering the chronicity of the main disease, receiving of the large quantities of blood and as the possible potential recipients of kidney transplants. Testing was performed by commercial serologic-enzyme-immune tests (Abott--USA, Behring--Germany) for CMV antibodies of IgG and IgM classes by which was determined serologic state of patients. Test results: out of 106 tested sera samples, 100 (99.33%) were CMV-seropositive (CMV-IgG), 27 (25.47%) were positive on recent CMVI (CMV-IgM), 99 (93.39%) received the blood previously, the majority of patients were with the diagnosis of primary
glomerulopathy
--68 (64.15%) and tubulointerstitial nephropathy--32 (30.18). Such results indicate the potentional possibility of reactivation of latent CMV and development of CMVI, and in transplant recipients--its rejection. It can occur if appropriate measures of prevention from CMVI are not timely undertaken, which includes the providing of CMV-seronegative-safe blood/hemoproducts, as well as the appropriate application of combined medicamentous therapy by chemical agents and immunomodulators-specific hyperimmune anti-CMV immunoglobulins.
...
PMID:[Cytomegalovirus infection in patients with kidney diseases]. 1121 78
For various ethnic and socioeconomic reasons the pattern of renal disease in the inner city displays distinctive features. Hypertension is frequent, often intractable, and generally conditioned by salt sensitivity and a high sodium intake. Chronic hypertensive nephrosclerosis, found predominantly in African Americans, comprises marked cardiomegaly, renal shrinkage, and hypertensive retinopathy. It has been overdiagnosed in the past, but actually accounts for less than 20% of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) in African Americans. Malignant hypertension, less frequent nowadays, may cause renal shutdown, which is reversible in a few cases; the heart and kidneys are often of normal size. Idiopathic focal segmental glomerulosclerosis is the most common cause of the primary nephrotic syndrome in blacks, but its incidence has also been rising in whites and Hispanics; it does not respond well to treatment, and almost one half of the patients develop ESRD within 10 years. Systemic lupus erythematosus is also more common in African Americans, in whom the severe proliferative forms of lupus nephritis pursue a more virulent course: one half of such patients develop ESRD in 5 years. Cocaine, the use of which has assumed epidemic proportions, may cause accelerated hypertension, acute renal failure from rhabdomyolysis, and progression of preexisting renal disease. Heroin nephropathy has all but disappeared and has been replaced by human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) nephropathy. The prognosis of HIV-infected patients maintained by dialysis has greatly improved. Sickle
glomerulopathy
, consisting of mesangial expansion, basement membrane duplication, and the absence of immune deposits, may cause the nephrotic syndrome in 4% of patients with severe sickle cell anemia, heralding death within 2 years in one half of patients and ESRD in two thirds; survival has not improved with dialysis. Diabetes is now the most common cause of ESRD. Familial aggregation of ESRD is frequently encountered. Interventions useful in the general population, such as vascular bypass procedures, should be undertaken with great caution and restraint in dialysis patients.
...
PMID:Renal disease in the inner city. 1145 21
Collapsing
glomerulopathy
(CG), an aggressive variant of focal segmental glomerular sclerosis, is a renal disease with severe proteinuria and rapidly progressive renal failure. The pathogenesis of CG is unknown. It strongly resembles human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV)-associated nephropathy, but the patients are HIV negative. The characteristic glomerular lesion is capillary loop collapse with prominent podocytes filling Bowman's space. Interestingly, these glomerular changes are usually associated with severe tubulointerstitial injury, including tubular epithelial degenerative changes, microcystic dilation of several tubules, and interstitial inflammatory cell infiltrate. Recently, it became evident that the morphologic pattern of CG may appear not only in native kidneys, but also de novo in renal allografts, and that the pattern of CG in renal transplants is not always associated with severe proteinuria. Studies describing CG in renal allografts are all based on biopsies. We report 3 allograft nephrectomy specimens that showed a zonal distribution of the characteristic collapsing glomerular changes with associated tubulointerstitial injury. All 3 kidneys had obliterative vascular changes. One nephrectomy specimen had chronic obliterative transplant arteriopathy, 1 had acute vascular rejection, and 1 had thrombotic microangiopathy. None of the patients had severe proteinuria. Our cases suggest that the morphologic pattern of CG in renal allografts may not represent the same disease process as CG in native kidneys and provide further evidence that collapsing glomerular changes do not define the disease entity of CG, but rather represent a pattern of renal injury. Among other factors, hemodynamic disturbance may play a role in the development of the pattern of CG in renal allografts.
...
PMID:Zonal distribution of glomerular collapse in renal allografts: possible role of vascular changes. 1205 80
Collapsing
glomerulopathy
is a pattern of renal injury that is seen in association with human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) infection. Patients with this HIV-associated nephropathy (HIVAN) present nephrotic syndrome and rapid deterioration of the renal function. There is no proven effective therapy for HIVAN, and the majority of the patients become dialysis dependent. We report a case of biopsy-proven HIVAN that showed spontaneous improvement of the renal function.
...
PMID:Spontaneous improvement of the renal function in a patient with HIV-associated focal glomerulosclerosis. 1216 70
A recent consensus conference proposed a new classification for focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS). Five patterns have been defined: FSGS not otherwise specified, perihilar variant, cellular variant, tip variant, and collapsing variant. In light of the multiplicity of classification schemes in use, the promise of a rational and uniform scheme for FSGS pathology is most welcome. This approach has worked extremely well for the classification of lupus nephritis. It does not necessarily mean, however, that this new classification scheme will help to select treatment protocols according to histopathologic subsets of FSGS. In fact, one renal biopsy examination may show multiple variants and this classification, despite many merits, still lumps categories that should be split and splits categories that should be lumped together. It has become clear that despite its histologic diversity FSGS begins as a podocyte disease that progresses from a cellular to a scar lesion. Recent years have brought about astonishing insight into the complex molecular array of proteins forming the slit diaphragm between podocyte foot processes, a narrow space essential for restricting glomerular permeability to albumin. Concentrating on the podocyte rather than on the glomerular tuft is helpful for abolishing the classic distinction between primary versus secondary forms of FSGS, a distinction that crumbles away with each new evidence of genetic, ischemic, or viral etiologies of FSGS, despite similar lesions. In fact, recent studies focusing on the podocyte changes that occur in various subsets of FSGS have unraveled the striking phenomena of podocyte dedifferentiation and transdifferentiation along with differential expression of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors. Interestingly, the latter showed that expression of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors p21 and proliferation marker Ki-67 are the same in cellular FSGS, collapsing
glomerulopathy
, and human
immunodeficiency
virus-associated FSGS. Taken together these findings lead to a reassuring unitary interpretation of the pluralistic appearance of FSGS by histopathology. Clearly, further studies of the podocyte will lead to improved understanding of FSGS and to improved classification schemes that are grounded in molecular understanding of glomerular injury and that will guide the clinician in the choice of treatment and prognosis.
...
PMID:E pluribus unum: The riddle of focal segmental glomerulosclerosis. 1270 73
Collapsing
glomerulopathy
is a morphologic variant of focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) characterized by segmental and global collapse of the glomerular capillaries, marked hypertrophy and hyperplasia of podocytes, and severe tubulointerstitial disease. The cause of this disorder is unknown, but nearly identical pathologic findings are present in idiopathic collapsing
glomerulopathy
and human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV)-associated nephropathy, and collapsing
glomerulopathy
has been associated with parvovirus B19 infection and treatment with pamidronate. The pathogenesis of collapsing
glomerulopathy
involves visceral epithelial cell injury leading to cell cycle dysregulation and a proliferative phenotype. Clinically, collapsing
glomerulopathy
is characterized by black racial predominance, a high incidence of nephrotic syndrome, and rapidly progressive renal failure. Collapsing
glomerulopathy
also may recur after renal transplantation or present de novo, often leading to loss of the allograft. The optimal treatment for collapsing
glomerulopathy
is unknown. Treatments may include steroids or cyclosporine in addition to aggressive blood pressure control, angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors and/or angiotensin II receptor blockers, and lipid lowering agents. The role of other immunosuppressive agents such as mycophenolate mofetil in the treatment of collapsing FSGS remains to be defined. Prospective clinical trials are needed to define optimal therapy of this aggressive form of FSGS.
...
PMID:Collapsing glomerulopathy. 1270 81
Collapsing
glomerulopathy
(CG), a variant of idiopathic focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS), can occur in both human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV)-positive and HIV-negative patients. Idiopathic membranous glomerulonephritis (MGN) has been reported to coexist with FSGS, but rarely with CG. We report 3 HIV-negative patients (2 men, 1 woman) who developed nephrotic syndrome secondary to MGN complicated by CG, with relatively rapid disease progression despite aggressive therapy.
...
PMID:Collapsing glomerulopathy coexisting with membranous glomerulonephritis in native kidney biopsies: a report of 3 HIV-negative patients. 1295 90
The authors report the first case of immunotactoid
glomerulopathy
(ITG) in a human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV)-positive, hepatitis B- and C-negative African-American man who presented with hematuria and proteinuria. His initial presentation was compatible with HIV associated nephropathy, but on renal biopsy he was found to have ITG. He has been treated with highly active antiretroviral therapy and an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor, but his proteinuria has not responded after 4 months of treatment. This case emphasizes the diverse glomerular lesions seen in HIV-positive patients and supports the use of renal biopsy to establish a diagnosis.
...
PMID:Immunotactoid glomerulopathy in an HIV-positive African-American man. 1465 25
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