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      Resolution of nodular glomerular lesions in a patient with light-chain nephropathy.

      1 ,
      Nephron
      S. Karger AG

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          Abstract

          A 37-year-old man developed nephrotic syndrome and renal insufficiency in 1986. He had kappa-light-chain protein both in serum and urine. A renal biopsy showed nodular glomerulosclerosis with deposition of kappa-light-chains in the mesangial area, compatible with light-chain nephropathy. Thereafter, he was treated with steroids and melphalane and the light-chain protein disappeared from both the urine and serum. Although his moderately impaired renal function maintained stable levels for over 10 years, he was diagnosed as having renal cell carcinoma in 1998, and a right nephrectomy was performed. Histopathological examination of a portion of the removed kidney, unaffected by carcinoma, showed mild mesangial proliferation, and both the nodular lesions and light-chain deposits were no longer observed. These observations suggest that an established nodular glomerular lesion may be reversible.

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          Reversal of lesions of diabetic nephropathy after pancreas transplantation.

          In patients with type I diabetes mellitus who do not have uremia and have not received a kidney transplant, pancreas transplantation does not ameliorate established lesions of diabetic nephropathy within five years after transplantation, but the effects of longer periods of normoglycemia are unknown. We studied kidney function and performed renal biopsies before pancreas transplantation and 5 and 10 years thereafter in eight patients with type I diabetes but without uremia who had mild to advanced lesions of diabetic nephropathy at the time of transplantation. The biopsy samples were analyzed morphometrically. All patients had persistently normal glycosylated hemoglobin values after transplantation. The median urinary albumin excretion rate was 103 mg per day before transplantation, 30 mg per day 5 years after transplantation, and 20 mg per day 10 years after transplantation (P=0.07 for the comparison of values at base line and at 5 years; P=0.11 for the comparison between base line and 10 years). The mean (+/-SD) creatinine clearance rate declined from 108+/-20 ml per minute per 1.73 m2 of body-surface area at base line to 74+/-16 ml per minute per 1.73 m2 at 5 years (P<0.001) and 74+/-14 ml per minute per 1.73 m2 at 10 years (P<0.001). The thickness of the glomerular and tubular basement membranes was similar at 5 years (570+/-64 and 928+/-173 nm, respectively) and at base line (594+/-81 and 911+/-133 nm, respectively) but had decreased by 10 years (to 404+/-38 and 690+/-111 nm, respectively; P<0.001 and P=0.004 for the comparisons with the base-line values). The mesangial fractional volume (the proportion of the glomerulus occupied by the mesangium) increased from base line (0.33+/-0.07) to 5 years (0.39+/-0.10, P=0.02) but had decreased at 10 years (0.27+/-0.02, P=0.05 for the comparison with the baseline value and P=0.006 for the comparison with the value at 5 years), mostly because of a reduction in mesangial matrix. Pancreas transplantation can reverse the lesions of diabetic nephropathy, but reversal requires more than five years of normoglycemia.
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            Author and article information

            Journal
            Nephron
            Nephron
            S. Karger AG
            1660-8151
            1660-8151
            Jul 2002
            : 91
            : 3
            Affiliations
            [1 ] Department of Nephrology, Sendai Shakaihoken Hospital, Tsutsumimachi 3-16-1, Aoba-ku, Sendai 981-8501, Japan. hottao@remus.dti.ne.jp
            Article
            nef91504
            10.1159/000064296
            12119486
            0a633460-4551-4701-ba14-697c801ac758
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