One hundred and eighty-six renal biopsy specimens from 79 adult patients with mesangial IgA nephropathy were examined and correlated with clinical data at the time of biopsy. Forty patients (group 1) with a history of macroscopic hematuria were compared with 39 patients (group 2) without such a history. Group 1 patients had a higher serum creatinine, 240 +/- 20 mumoles/liter vs. 140 +/- 10 mumoles/liter (P less than 0.01), lower creatinine clearance 69 +/- 36 ml/min vs. 87 +/- 30 ml/min (P less than 0.05), and a higher percentage of patients presenting with serum creatinine greater than 300 mumoles/liter, 22.5% vs. 5.1% (P less than 0.05). Fourteen biopsies were performed in 11 patients during an episode of macroscopic hematuria (group 1A). One hundred percent of these biopsy specimens showed crescents. Ninety-one percent of 11 biopsy specimens from ten patients (group 1B), taken 3 to 27 days following an episode but at a time when urinary red cells were less than 1,000,000/ml, also showed crescent formation. Of 14 biopsy specimens from 13 patients without macroscopic hematuria, but with greater than 1,000,000 red cells/ml in the urine just prior to biopsy (group 2A), 79% had crescents. In conclusion, macroscopic hematuria in adult patients with mesangial IgA nephropathy is associated with a high likelihood of crescents on renal biopsy specimens and worse renal function. Careful quantitative assessment of the urine for renal bleeding may help to better define the activity of disease in these patients.
The risk to the transplanted kidney of vesicoureteric reflux was evaluated in 150 consecutive first cadaveric renal allografts surviving for over three months. Of the 119 (79 per cent) allografts studied by micturating cystography 29 (24 per cent) were shown to reflux. The presence of reflux was associated with urine leakage and reoperation, and with ureteric insertion involving a short intramural tunnel. Graft failure (graft nephrectomy or death from renal failure) occurred in 14 of 29 refluxing grafts as compared to 14 failures in 90 nonrefluxing grafts (P less than 0.01). Graft failure in the refluxing group was typically slow, and commonly associated with proteinuria, microscopic hematuria, hypertension and a biopsy appearance of mesangiocapillary glomerular change. Urinary infection, though frequent (69 per cent), was not more common in the group with than in that without reflux. Vesicoureteric reflux is an important cause of late renal-graft failure.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.