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Preexisting Membranous Nephropathy in Allograft Kidney
22
Citations
8
References
1999
Year
Glomerular DiseaseRenal PathologyImmunologyPathologyRenal TransplantationGlomerulonephritisRenal FunctionIga GlomerulonephritisChronic Kidney DiseaseAutoimmune DiseaseKidney TransplantKidney FailureMembranous NephropathyAutoimmunityDonor KidneyUrologyRenal DiseaseKidney TransplantationMedicineElectron-dense DepositsNephrologyKidney Research
A case of membranous nephropathy, preexisting in a donor kidney, will be reported. A 41-year-old man underwent a cadaver renal transplantation. An allograft biopsy specimen obtained during the operation showed spike formation on periodic acid-silver methenamine staining and deposition of IgG along the glomerular capillary loop on immunoperoxidase staining. Immunofluorescence staining for IgG remained in the specimens obtained on day 11 and after 4 weeks, but markedly decreased in the specimen obtained 7 weeks after transplantation. Electron-dense deposits also decreased in amount, but irregular thickening of the glomerular basement membrane with spikes, electron-lucent washout lesions, and small amounts of electron-dense deposits remained 20 months after the transplantation. These findings suggest that membranous nephropathy, as well as IgA nephritis and diabetic nephropathy, resolve after renal transplantation and that deposition of IgG markedly decreases within a few months after transplantation, but that complete histological restoration of the basement membrane needs at least a few years.
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