Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0851184 (thinning)
11,252 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Membranous nephropathy, mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis and renal amyloidosis are common renal pathology in RA patients. However, IgA nephropathy and diffuse thinning of glomerular basement membrane are described as common and characteristic renal lesions in Japanese RA patients. Glomerular filtration rate may decrease significantly in active lupus nephritis, but renal plasma flow does not change or even increase. These findings seem to be characteristic of SLE patients with active renal disorders. Therefore, filtration fraction may be a useful clinical parameter to evaluate SLE patients. Scleroderma renal crisis(SRC) has been believed to be the most serious renal disorder in systemic sclerosis (SSc). Recently, the presence of an antibody to RNA polymerase has been associated with a high prevalence of SRC.
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PMID:[Renal disorders in patients with collagen vascular diseases]. 1007 13

Frasier syndrome (FS) is a rare disease characterized by male pseudohermaphroditism and slowly progressing nephropathy. FS originates from heterozygous mutation in the intron 9 splicing donor site of Wilms' tumor suppressor gene (WT1). Focal segmental glomerular sclerosis is common in FS, but there have not been so many detailed pathologic investigations. The authors examined the kidneys of 3 patients with FS. The results showed that nephropathy started as mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis, and later a concomitant focal segmental lesion developed. In all cases, electron microscopy results showed widespread thinning, splitting, and lamellation of the glomerular basement membrane, which mimicked hereditary nephritis. Throughout adulthood, WT1 protein expresses on glomerular podocytes. Recent reports described that podocytes expressing WT1 play an important role in maintaining the glomerular basement membrane. Hereditary nephritis-like glomerular basement membrane findings in FS suggest that one of the important functions of podocytes is to form and maintain the glomerular basement membrane.
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PMID:Alport syndrome-like basement membrane changes in Frasier syndrome: an electron microscopy study. 1272 46

The defining ultrastructural features of hereditary nephritis are "basket weave" lamellation or thinning of glomerular basement membranes. Electron-dense deposits are not seen and immunofluorescence (IF) is generally negative. In this study, we report 5 cases of hereditary nephritis in which substantial amounts of glomerular electron-dense deposits were identified on electron microscopy, with corresponding positive IF staining in 4 cases, suggesting immune complex-mediated glomerulonephritis. However, no case had histological evidence of glomerular endocapillary or extracapillary proliferation or leukocyte infiltration typical of active glomerulonephritis. Four cases were diagnosed at outside institutions simply as forms of glomerulonephritis without considering the possibility of hereditary nephritis and were sent for consultation in contemplation of possible immunosuppressive therapy. All patients had negative serologies and no known underlying infectious or autoimmune disease; 4 patients had family history of hematuria or renal disease. The glomerular electron-dense deposits were predominantly mesangial (4 cases) and intramembranous (4 cases), as well as subepithelial (2 cases) or subendothelial (1 case). Corresponding IF positivity for immune reactants was identified in 4 cases, and IgG was the predominant immunoglobulin deposited. A characteristic feature was the tendency for deposits to form between the complex layers of glomerular basement membrane material, favoring a process of nonspecific entrapment of immune reactants within the thickened, lamellated basement membrane. In all cases, a diagnosis of hereditary nephritis was confirmed by demonstration of the characteristic loss of immunoreactivity for the alpha5 subunit of collagen IV (4 cases) or Goodpasture's antigen (1 case) in renal or epidermal basement membranes. These cases expand the spectrum of unusual pathological findings in hereditary nephritis and emphasize the potential for hereditary nephritis to mimic immune complex glomerulonephritis.
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PMID:Hereditary nephritis mimicking immune complex-mediated glomerulonephritis. 1664 52


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