We report on the development of minimal change disease (MCD) with nephrotic syndrome (NS) and acute kidney injury (AKI), shortly after first injection of the BNT162b2 COVID-19 vaccine (Pfizer-BioNTech). A 50-year-old previously healthy male was admitted to our hospital following the appearance of peripheral edema. Ten days earlier, he had received the first injection of the vaccine. Four days after injection, he developed lower leg edema, which rapidly progressed to anasarca. On admission, serum creatinine was 2.31 mg/dL and 24-hr urinary protein excretion was 6.9 grams. As kidney function continued to decline over the next days, empiric treatment was initiated with prednisone 80 mg/day. A kidney biopsy was performed and the findings were consistent with MCD. Ten days later, kidney function began to improve, gradually returning to normal. The clinical triad of MCD, NS and AKI has been previously described under a variety of circumstances, but not following the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine. The association between the vaccination and MCD is at this time temporal and by exclusion, and by no means firmly established. We await further reports of similar cases to evaluate the true incidence of this possible vaccine side-effect.
This study provides strong evidence that renal production of NO is reduced in early DM and that this reduction is associated with decreased levels of nNOS activity and protein in the macula densa.
We have shown that increased renal IGF-1 and increased NO production during the very early stages of STZ-induced DN are associated with renal hypertrophy and hyperfiltration in diabetic rats. Modulating the IGF-1 availability to the kidney by nitric oxide synthase inhibition significantly reduced renal hypertrophy and hyperfiltration during the first week of STZ-induced diabetes mellitus.
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