We examined the correlation among the levels of urinary monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1) and interleukin-8 (IL-8), hyperglycemia, and renal injuries in patients with type 2 diabetic nephropathy. The levels of urinary MCP-1, IL-8, protein excretion, blood urea nitrogen (BUN), serum creatinine (s-Cr), glycohemoglobin A1c (HbA1c), and fasting plasma glucose (FPG) were measured in 24 patients with type 2 diabetic nephropathy and 14 healthy adults as controls. Diabetic nephropathy was classified into three stages: stage 1 = normoalbuminuric, stage 2 = microalbuminuric, and stage 3 = macroalbuminuric. All of the patients showed normal ranges in renal function tests. Levels of urinary MCP-1 in all patients with diabetic nephropathy were significantly higher than those in healthy adults (P < 0.05). The levels of urinary MCP-1 in patients with diabetic nephropathy increased gradually according to the clinical stage of this disease. In contrast, the levels of urinary IL-8 in patients with diabetic nephropathy increased in stages 2 and 3. There was a significant correlation between the levels of urinary IL-8 and those of HbA1c. High glucose may stimulate MCP-1 and/or IL-8 production and their excretion into the urine independently of the phases or pathological lesions of this disease. It appears that IL-8 increased in the early stage of diabetic nephropathy, and MCP-1 increased in the advanced stage of this disease. It was concluded that measurement of urinary MCP-1 and IL-8 may be useful for evaluating the degree of renal injuries in patients with type 2 diabetic nephropathy.
In 2002, the Joint Committee of the Special Study Group on Progressive Glomerular Diseases, Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare of Japan newly revised the clinical guidelines for IgA nephropathy (Sakai et al.: Jpn J Nephrol 37:417-421, 1995; Tomino and Sakai: Clin Exp Nephrol, 7, 93-97, 2003). The prognostic stages were classified into four groups: the good prognosis group (Group I), relatively good prognosis group (Group II), relatively poor prognosis group (Group III), and poor prognosis group (Group IV). The relationship between the levels of Hb, Ht, and RBC in peripheral blood and the renal prognostic stages was determined in 62 patients with IgA nephropathy in the present study. The mean levels of Hb, Ht, and RBC were significantly lower in Group IV than in Group I (P<0.05). However, there were no significant changes in the levels of serum creatinine (s-Cr) or creatinine clearance (CCr) among these four groups. It appears that the levels of Hb, Ht, and RBC in peripheral blood may be important clinical parameters for the evaluation of prognostic stages in patients with IgA nephropathy.
Using a sandwich ELISA, we studied 48 patients with IgA nephropathy and 10 patients with diffuse mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis without IgA deposition (non-IgA PGN) to determine if levels of serum soluble Fas (s-Fas) might reflect the disease activity. The levels of serum s-Fas in patients with the advanced stage of IgA nephropathy were significantly higher than those in patients with the mild stage of the disease, in non-IgA PGN or in healthy controls. The results showed that advanced stage IgA nephropathy patients who showed heavy proteinuria and the presence of urinary casts revealed high levels of serum s-Fas. It was thus suggested that the measurement of serum s-Fas is useful in evaluating the degree of renal injury in patients with IgA nephropathy.
We report here an adult patient with lupus nephritis who had a good clinical course under long-term observation. Apoptotic bodies in the glomeruli were determined in serial renal biopsy specimens by the nick end labeling method. Apoptotic bodies in the proliferated glomerular cells were detected in the 3rd renal biopsy but not in the 2nd biopsy. The clinical activities of lupus nephritis fluctuated until the time of the 3rd renal biopsy. The 3rd renal biopsy was performed because of increased proteinuria and an increased amount of hyaline, granular and red blood cell casts, with impairment of renal function. The levels of proteinuria, creatinine clearance and serum complements were improved after the 3rd renal biopsy. It appears that apoptosis might control glomerular cell proliferation and also influence the clinical course of lupus nephritis.
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