Since several studies have suggested that a slight increase in urinary albumin excretion (microalbuminuria) is predictive of nephropathy in patients with diabetes mellitus, we studied the relation of albumin excretion to renal structure in patients with insulin-dependent (Type I) diabetes. Renal biopsy specimens were evaluated with light- and electron-microscopical morphometric techniques in 48 patients who had had diabetes for 5 to 40 years and who excreted less than 200 mg of urinary albumin per 24 hours. Patients in Group I (n = 26) had normal urinary albumin excretion, creatinine clearance, and blood pressure; those in Group II (n = 10) had increased urinary albumin excretion but normal creatinine clearance and blood pressure; those in Group III (n = 12) had increased urinary albumin excretion and hypertension, decreased creatinine clearance, or both. Glomerular structure varied similarly, ranging from normal to abnormal in Groups I and II, but was consistently abnormal in Group III. The thickness of the glomerular basement membrane, the fractional volume of the mesangium, and the mesangial volume per glomerulus in Group III exceeded the corresponding values in the other groups significantly. Thus, microalbuminuria, when present with hypertension, decreased creatinine clearance, or both, indicates established abnormalities of glomerular structure. Normal albumin excretion, or microalbuminuria without these other functional abnormalities, does not accurately predict the severity of the underlying glomerular lesions in patients with Type I diabetes.
A sustained decrease of plasma bilirubin concentrations occurred in homozygous recessive Gunn rats lacking the enzyme uridine diphosphate glucuronyltransferase following infusion into the portal vein of hepatocytes from heterozygous nonjaundiced Gunn rats possessing the enzyme. Transplantation of cells capable of continuous enzyme production could be an effective mode of therapy for congenital enzyme deficiency diseases.
Overt proteinuria is a hallmark of diabetic nephropathy while microalbuminuria is thought to be a predictor of later onset of diabetic nephropathy. Yet the mechanisms for abnormal urinary protein leak in diabetes have not been defined. We studied 28 patients with type I diabetes for 7 to 33 years. Creatinine clearance, urinary albumin excretion rate (UAE), and multiple blood pressures were obtained in each patient. A renal biopsy was performed in each patient and in 28 normal subjects. Quantitative stereology was used to determine foot process (FP) width, filtration slit length density (FSLV) and filtration slit length/glomerulus (FSLG). FP width was slightly wider than normal in diabetic patients with UAE less than 250 mg/24 hr while FP was significantly wider than both of these groups in diabetics with UAE greater than 250 mg/24 hr. FSLV and FSLG were similar in normals and diabetics with UAE less than 250 mg/24 hr but both were reduced in diabetics with UAE greater than 250 mg/24 hr. UAE correlated with FP width (P less than 0.05), FSLG (P less than 0.01) and most precisely and FSLV (P less than 0.001). Diabetics with microalbuminuria had values for all the structural parameters measured here not different from diabetics with UAE in the normal range. Perturbations of epithelial cell structure are present in diabetes mellitus especially in patients with nephropathy. The exact relationships between albuminuria and epithelial cell structure remains to be elucidated.
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