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Query: UMLS:C0851184 (thinning)
11,252 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Glomerulonephritis has been believed to be a rare complication in rheumatoid arthritis (RA). However, recent studies have revealed a focal segmental increase in mesangial cells and matrix in RA patients with hematuria. In our series, proteinuria, hematuria or both abnormalities were recognized in 74 (22%) out of 336 RA cases. Among 119 patients examined by renal biopsy, mild mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis (GN) was found in 25 patients, of which 22 demonstrated mesangial IgA deposits, by immunofluorescent microscopy. Membranous nephropathy was noticed in 26 cases. Three cases of membranous nephropathy had no history of gold or D-penicillamine treatment. Electron microscopy revealed diffuse thinning of the glomerular basement membrane in 12 cases. The average thickness of the glomerular basement membrane was significantly thinner in RA patients than in normal subjects. The immunological processes associated with rheumatoid factor do not seem to be related to the renal lesions in RA patients.
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PMID:[Renal disorders in rheumatoid arthritis]. 158 51

To clarify the incidence of thin basement membrane disease (TMD) among the patients with idiopathic asymptomatic hematuria and/or proteinuria, in 217 serious renal biopsies (children 85, adults 132) were studied with clinical and morphometric analysis. TMD used is defined as follows: 1) Glomerulus in minor abnormalities; 2) GBM less than or equal to 200 nm in width, with more than 20% in total glomerular capillary surface; 3) Absence of significant immunoglobulins or complement components. Out of 217 patients 93% had either IgA nephropathy (55%), normal glomeruli (21%) or TMD (17%). TMD consisted of 22% in children and 14% in adults. Remained 15 consisted of non-IgA mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis (6 cases), incomplete foot process disease (5), membranous nephropathy (2), membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (1), and unclassified (1). Patients with TMD were found mostly (71%) in younger age less than 20 years old. Out of the patients with TMD, 38% had renal abnormality in the family history, but remainders were sporadic. The common urinary abnormality in TMD was microscopic hematuria occasionally with mild proteinuria (95%), while proteinuria only was rare (5%). Outcome of TMD was favorable prognosis with normal renal function. TMD was histologically divided into 2 groups; diffuse type (GBM thinning was more than 50% in the capillary surface) (19 cases; 51%), and focal type (it was less than 50%) (18 cases; 49%). The incidence of those family history was 64% and 15%, respectively (p less than 0.05). It was concluded that TMD was a popular disorder in patients with asymptomatic hematuria and/or proteinuria and it may expect 17% in incidence.
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PMID:[Thin basement membrane disease in patients with asymptomatic hematuria and/or proteinuria: a clinicopathological study]. 187 54

A double glomerulopathy (IgA glomerulonephritis [IgAGN] associated with thin glomerular basement membrane disease [TGBMD]) is reported in a 39-year-old woman presenting with macroscopic-microscopic hematuria. Her 3-year-old daughter was also affected by microhematuria of probable glomerular origin. The diagnosis of IgAGN was made by means of immunofluorescence investigation, which showed generalized diffuse mesangial deposits. TGBMD was identified by electron microscopic investigations, which disclosed thinning (up to 160 nm) of basement membrane of several capillary loops and prominence of the lamina densa. Bearing in mind the known frequencies of the two glomerulopathies, their association may not be coincidental, and, therefore, is worthwhile researching in hematuric patients.
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PMID:The association of IgA glomerulonephritis and thin glomerular basement membrane disease in a hematuric patient: light and electron microscopic and immunofluorescence investigation. 188 38

Persistent microscopic haematuria, especially when present in young individuals and associated with proteinuria, is generally of glomerular origin. Important causes include glomerulonephritis and Alport's syndrome. A new type of benign familial haematuria has now been reported characterised by little or no proteinuria, no deafness or hypertension and no deterioration of renal function. Examination by electron microscopy of renal biopsy material shows thinning or attenuation of the glomerular basement membrane. A family with thin basement membrane nephropathy is reported to illustrate this newly recognised entity. This disorder should be considered in any patient with persistent microscopic haematuria. Pathologists who assess renal biopsy material should pay greater attention to an ultrastructural morphometric analysis of the glomerular basement membranes of at least two glomeruli.
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PMID:Familial haematuria due to thin basement membrane nephropathy. 237 Oct 4

A prospective multicenter study was designed to determine the frequency and prognostic importance of hypercalciuria in children with hematuria. Urinary calcium excretion was examined in 215 patients with unexplained isolated hematuria (no proteinuria, urolithiasis, infection or systemic disorder). Hypercalciuria (urinary calcium excretion greater than 4 mg/kg/day) was identified in 76 patients (35%). Compared to patients with normal urinary calcium excretion, children with hematuria and hypercalciuria were characterized by male preponderance, white race, family history of urolithiasis, gross hematuria and calcium oxalate crystals. Renal biopsies were performed in 10 patients with urinary calcium excretion 0.4 to 2.5 mg/kg/day; three had IgA glomerulonephritis, three had glomerular basement membrane thinning, one had proliferative glomerulonephritis and three were normal. Renal biopsies in three patients with hypercalciuria showed focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, hereditary nephritis or no abnormalities. Oral calcium loading tests showed renal hypercalciuria in 26 patients, absorptive hypercalciuria in 15 patients and were not diagnostic in 35 patients. Serum parathyroid hormone, bicarbonate and phosphorus and urinary cyclic adenosine monophosphate concentrations were similar in the three groups of hypercalciuric patients. Urinary calcium excretion after one week of dietary calcium restriction was higher (5.8 mg/kg/day) in renal hypercalciuria than in other hypercalciuric patients (3.4 mg/kg/day), P less than 0.01. One to four years follow-up was available for 184 patients. Eight of 60 hypercalciuric patients developed urolithiasis or renal colic compared to 2 of 124 patients with normal urinary calcium excretion (P less than 0.001). Hypercalciuria is commonly associated with isolated hematuria and represents a risk factor for future urolithiasis in children with hematuria.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Idiopathic hypercalciuria: association with isolated hematuria and risk for urolithiasis in children. The Southwest Pediatric Nephrology Study Group. 240 91

In their review the authors discuss the history of Alport's syndrome, its nomenclature, incidence, genetics, clinical diagnosis. The authors emphasize electron microscopic findings and criteria of the diagnosis (haematuria or renal failure in the family, progressive nervous deafness, typical changes of the basal glomerular membrane (GBM) and ophtalmological findings of lenticonus or perimacular spots. Familial haematuria (FH) is according to the authors defined as haematuria in several members of the family. Based on data in the literature and the authors' experience, the authors discuss the differential diagnosis of FH where Alport's syndrome is relatively rare. A far more frequent unit is benign familial haematuria characterized morphologically as isolated thinning of the GBM. In some cases these patients are threatened by iatrogenic damage from unnecessary and invasive diagnostic method. The finding of thinned GBM and normal renal function in the parents and grandparents suggest a favourable prognosis also in child patients. Cases of familial glomerulonephritis or idiopathic syndrome with glomerulosclerosis or familial IgA nephropathies are relatively rare. Familial haematuria is are relatively rare. Familial haematuria is relatively frequent (according to the authors 20% of all obscure haematurias) and their diagnosis is based on systematic examination of the urine in other members of the patient's family who also suffer from haematuria.
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PMID:[Familial hematuria and Alport's syndrome]. 265 95

Ultrasound was used to measure echogenesis, renal cortex thickness and kidney length in 59 patients with various types of the primary glomerulonephritis. The obtained results have shown that the measured parameters correlated with the progress in renal failure. An increase in the intensity of echo from the cortex, thinning of the renal cortex, and the decrease in renal length are typical signs of the advancement of renal failure. As renal function deteriorates in the consequence of destruction of its parenchyma, ultrasound examination might be an illustration of the pathological changes in the kidney. Considering the fact that ultrasound is perfectly safe, it may be used in monitoring of the disease progress and the results of treatment.
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PMID:[Use of ultrasound for evaluating structural changes of the renal parenchyma in chronic primary glomerulopathies]. 270 94

Thin-basement-membrane nephropathy, also called benign recurrent hematuria, is characterized by diffuse thinning of the glomerular basement membrane and by hematuria. To determine the incidence of thin-basement-membrane nephropathy among patients with idiopathic hematuria, we conducted a prospective study in the nephrology units of three large hospitals in the Netherlands. Eighty normotensive adults without azotemia underwent renal biopsy because of recurrent macroscopic hematuria (n = 26) or persistent microscopic hematuria (n = 54). Idiopathic IgA nephropathy was found in 27 of the 80 patients. Light microscopical examination showed that 42 patients had normal renal tissue. The remaining 11 patients had mesangioproliferative glomerulonephritis (n = 5), interstitial nephritis (n = 3), or focal global glomerulosclerosis (n = 3). Tissue from the 42 patients whose renal biopsy specimens were normal when examined with light microscopy was analyzed morphometrically with electron microscopy to determine the thickness of the glomerular basement membrane. Two subsets of patients were identified by this analysis. In 18, thin-basement-membrane nephropathy was found (mean basement-membrane thickness [+/- SE], 191 +/- 28 nm; normal, 350 +/- 43 nm); all but one of these 18 patients had microscopic hematuria, which persisted during follow-up (median duration, 50 months). (Of the 54 patients who presented with microscopic hematuria, 17 [31 percent] had thin-basement-membrane nephropathy.) The thickness of the glomerular basement membrane was normal in the other 24 patients (361 +/- 69 nm); during follow-up, hematuria disappeared in all 13 of these patients who had macroscopic hematuria, and hematuria resolved in 5 of the 11 patients who had microscopic hematuria. We conclude that in patients with persistent microscopic hematuria, the incidence of thin-basement-membrane nephropathy is similar to that of idiopathic IgA nephropathy. Morphometric analysis of the thickness of the glomerular basement membrane should be included in the workup of adults with persistent microscopic hematuria that is not of urologic origin.
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PMID:Thin-basement-membrane nephropathy in adults with persistent hematuria. 290 74

Recently the appearance of deformed polymorphous erythrocytes in the urinary sediment has been described as characteristic of glomerular bleeding. We studied 30 patients with histologically confirmed glomerular disorders and 25 patients with urological diseases and with hematuria. In the sediment of 10 ml urine 200 erythrocytes were counted under phase-contrast microscopy and evaluated relative to their morphology. The number of glomerular erythrocytes was expressed as a percentage. In all groups of glomerular disorders (mesangial-proliferative, membranous and membrano-proliferative glomerulonephritis, focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, glomerulonephritis of systemic disease, thinning of the glomerular basement membrane) the percentage of glomerular erythrocytes varied widely between 2 and 100%. In 7 cases less than 10% of glomerular erythrocytes were found. There was no correlation between the percentage of glomerular erythrocytes and the degree of renal insufficiency, hematuria or proteinuria. On the other hand, in patients with hematuria from the lower urinary tract, erythrocytes were uniformly non-glomerular in shape (95-100%). We conclude that 10-20% or more of glomerular erythrocytes in the urinary sediment are a good indicator of glomerular disease, whereas lower figures do not definitely rule out a glomerular origin for hematuria.
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PMID:[Diagnosis of glomerular and non-glomerular erythrocyturia using phase contrast microscopy of the urine sediment]. 331 Feb 12

In a recent review of 480 renal biopsies, 41 cases were identified in which glomerular basement membrane (GBM) ultrastructural abnormalities were the major lesion. All of the patients had hematuria. None had evidence of immune-mediated glomerulonephritis. Positive family histories of renal disease were present in the majority of cases, and one case of Alport's syndrome was included. Subjectively, the GBM changes were variable but nearly always included membrane thinning. For objective characterization of this glomerular abnormality, a detailed morphometric study of GBM thickness was undertaken: 12 of these patients (study group) were compared with seven patients (control subjects) with subjectively normal glomeruli who underwent biopsy for reasons other than nonsurgical hematuria but who were also thought to have normal glomerular ultrastructure. The seven control subjects had a mean GBM thickness of 394 nm (SD, 19; range, 356 to 432 nm). Of the 12 study group patients, 11 had mean GBM thicknesses significantly different from control values (nine had mean GBM thinning: range, 235 to 327 nm; two had thickening: means, 440 and 469 nm). In the remaining case (Alport's syndrome) the overall mean was normal, but an abnormal distribution of very thin and very thick GBM regions was seen. Of the four apparently normal hematuric patients, significant mean GBM thinning (326 to 347 nm) was demonstrated in three, with an excess of thin GBM in the fourth case, although the mean thickness was normal. Thus, measurable abnormalities were defined in all of the cases of hematuria examined. The GBM measurements confirmed the subjective impression of membrane abnormality, usually attenuation, as the principal finding in this group of hematuric patients. Furthermore, morphometric analysis may reveal subtle changes of GBM thickness missed by subjective assessment.
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PMID:Glomerular basement membrane abnormalities associated with apparently idiopathic hematuria: ultrastructural morphometric analysis. 353 Sep 72


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