Background and objectives: Few well-designed investigations have examined how tonsillectomy plus steroid pulse therapy affects IgA nephropathy. A prospective, controlled study therefore was performed to compare the effects of combined therapy with those of steroid pulse alone in patients with IgA nephropathy.Design, setting, participants, & measurements: Fifty-five patients were followed up for 54.0 ؎ 21.2 mo. Thirty-five of them underwent tonsillectomy and steroid pulse therapy (group C), and 20 received steroid pulse monotherapy (group M). Both groups received methylprednisolone intravenously, followed by oral prednisolone (initial dosage 0.5 mg/kg per d) for 12 to 18 mo. Primary evaluation items were a 100% increase in serum creatinine from baseline levels or the disappearance of urinary protein (UP) and/or occult blood (UOB) indicating clinical remission.Results: At 24 mo after the initial treatment, the ratios of the UP and UOB disappearance were higher in group C than in group M, and the therapeutic effect persisted until the final observation. None of group C achieved a 100% increase in serum creatinine from the baseline level, whereas one patient in group M developed ESRD during the observation period. The histologic findings of repeated biopsy specimens from 18 patients revealed that mesangial proliferation and IgA deposition were significantly more reduced in group C than in group M. The Cox regression model showed that the combined therapy was approximately six-fold more effective in causing the disappearance of UP than steroid pulse monotherapy.Conclusion: Tonsillectomy combined with steroid pulse treatment can induce clinical remission in patients with IgA nephropathy.
The histological localization was investigated of adrenomedullin (AM), a novel vasorelaxant peptide originally isolated from human pheochromocytoma. The immunohistological distribution was examined of AM in human, rat, and porcine tissues using a polyclonal antibody to a fragment comprising C-terminal amino acids 40-52 of human adrenomedullin [AM(40-52)NH2]. Almost all of the human pheochromocytoma and normal adrenal medullary cells of all three species were immunostained and found to be intensely positive for AM. Furthermore, AM-immunoreactive cells were present in the pancreatic islets, gastrointestinal neuroendocrine system, anterior pituitary, and choroid plexus with some degree of interspecies heterogeneity. These findings indicate that AM-immunoreactive cells are widely distributed in the endocrine and neuroendocrine system, suggesting that AM plays some important role in the control of systemic and local circulation and also of humoral secretion.
Adrenomedullin (AM) is a novel hypotensive and vasodilator peptide. We previously examined the localization of AM in human, rat, and porcine tissues using a polyclonal antibody against synthetic human AM[40-52]. We demonstrated that AM is widely distributed in the endocrine and neuroendocrine systems, but not in the heart, kidney, or blood vessels, although high levels of AM mRNA were detected in the latter tissues. In this study, we further investigated the distribution of AM by using two newly developed monoclonal antibodies against synthetic human AM peptides, [12-25] and [46-52]. AM immunoreactivity was observed in cardiac myocytes, vascular smooth muscle cells, endothelial cells, and renal distal and collecting tubules. In addition, AM-immunoreactive (IR) cells were found in mucosal and glandular epithelia of the digestive, respiratory, and reproductive systems, as well as the endocrine and neuroendocrine systems. These findings indicate that AM-IR cells are more widely distributed in human tissues and suggest that AM might play multiple biological roles in humans.
Objective The serum IgA/C3 ratio might be considered to serve as a diagnostic marker for patients with IgA nephropathy (IgAN), but its value as a marker of the severity of histological lesions or prognosis is unknown.Methods We studied the serum IgA/C3 ratio, using standardized reference material, in 86 patients with IgAN and in 32 with non-IgAN. The patients with IgAN were divided according to the severity of histological lesions (mild IgAN, n=29 and severe IgAN, n=57) based on Japanese clinical guidelines.Results The serum IgA level was significantly higher, while its C3 level was lower in patients with severe IgAN compared to those with non-IgAN. However, these levels were not different between patients with mild IgAN and non-IgAN. In contrast, the serum IgA/C3 ratio obviously differed among the three groups (2.47±0.96 vs. 3.63±1.44 vs. 4.72±1.86; p<0.01, ANOVA). Kaplan-Meier analysis of the patients with IgAN classified according to the mean serum IgA/C3 ratio revealed that the group with high serum IgA/C3 (4.5 and above) had a significantly poorer renal outcome (p<0.05, log-rank test), since the cumulative renal survival rate at 5 years was 84.4% vs. 100%. The ratio (%) of patients with severe IgAN in whom hematuria disappeared, was significantly higher in the low, than in the high serum IgA/C3 group (41.9% vs. 15.4%; p<0.05, t-test).Conclusion The serum IgA/C3 ratio appears to reflect the histological severity of IgAN and could serve as a marker of the progression of IgAN.
As the numbers of aging patients with manifestations of renal disease increase, the elderly must frequently undergo renal biopsies. This study examined the characteristics of clinicopathological correlations in elderly patients. Medical and clinical records from renal biopsies registered in two hospitals between January 2000 and December 2004 were reviewed. Among 406 patients (female: male 224/182; age 43.9 +/- 18.8 years, mean +/- SD) who underwent renal biopsies, 61 (15.1%) who were aged 65 years and older (female: male, 29/32; age 72.8 +/- 5.2 years) were selected. The elderly usually underwent percutaneous renal biopsies for renal diseases such as nephrotic syndrome (43%) and acute or rapidly progressive renal failure (A/RPRF, 39%). Focal/segmental glomerulosclerosis (23%), minimal change disease (19%), and membranous nephropathy (15%) are frequently diagnosed based on biopsy specimens from patients with nephrotic syndrome. Among patients presenting with A/RPRF, 17 (71%) and 4 (17%) had pauci-immune, MPO-ANCA positive, crescentic glomerulonephritis and interstitial nephritis, respectively, and benefited from therapeutic intervention. Histopathological and pre-biopsy clinical diagnoses differed in nine (15%) patients. The complication rate after biopsy was low (3%). Primary glomerular diseases presenting with nephrotic syndrome and primary crescentic glomerulonephritis associated with rapidly progressive renal failure were the most frequently diagnosed among the elderly who underwent renal biopsy. Percutaneous renal biopsy provides clinically useful information about the elderly because clinical presentation and the predicted diagnosis sometimes vary.
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