Renal Pathology
Glomerulonephritis:
- Membranous Glomerulonephritis:
- The glomerular basement membrane is diffusely thickened.
- Immune complexes are present on the outer aspect of the basement membrane beneath the podocytes.
- Late stages show diffuse glomerular basement membrane thickening.
- Post-Streptococcal Glomerulonephritis:
- Common in children aged 6-10 years.
- Microscopic features: enlarged glomeruli, diffuse mesangial cell proliferation, endothelial cell proliferation, epithelial cell proliferation, infiltration of neutrophils and mononuclear cells.
- Approximately 90% of children recover completely.
- Chronic Glomerulonephritis:
- Grossly: both kidneys are shrunken, symmetrical, the surface of the renal cortex is granular, the renal cortex is thin, most are fibrotic.
- It is the final stage of many glomerulonephritis diseases.
- Minimal Change Disease (Benign Nephrotic Syndrome):
- Common in children.
- Characteristics: respond well to corticosteroids.
- Podocytes lose their foot processes and the cell layer adheres to the outer aspect of the basement membrane.
- Nephrotic Syndrome:
- The main cause in adults is extramembranous glomerulonephritis.
- Characteristics: Immunoglobulin deposition beneath the podocyte foot processes.
- Clinical manifestations: high proteinuria, nephrotic syndrome.
- Renal Cell Carcinoma:
- Microscopic features: clear cells are round, polyhedral, with clear and wide cytoplasm.
- Clinical manifestations: pain in the ribs-spine, palpable mass, hematuria (10% of cases).
Glomerular Filtration System:
- Endothelial cell layer
- Basement membrane layer
- Podocyte layer
Leave a Reply