Publication | Closed Access
Immunofluorescent Examination of Biopsies from Long-Term Renal Allografts
38
Citations
23
References
1970
Year
Glomerular DiseaseHistocompatibilityRenal PathologyImmunologyTransplantation MedicinePredominant Immunoglobulin ClassGlomerulonephritisIga GlomerulonephritisGraft SurvivalLong-term Renal AllograftsAllergyKidney TransplantAutoimmunityImmunologic DiseaseTransplant ImmunologyTransplant RejectionUrologyKidney TransplantationMedicineNephrologyGraft RejectionImmunoglobulin DepositionRenal Allografts
Immunofluorescent examination of open renal biopsies revealed clear-cut glomerular localization of immunoglobulins not related clearly to the quality of donor-recipient histocompatibility in 19 of 34 renal allografts. The biopsies were obtained 18 to 31 months after transplantations primarily from related donors with a variable quality of histocompatibility match. IgG was the predominant immunoglobulin class fixed in 13 biopsies, and IgM in six. The pattern of immunoglobulin deposition was linear, connoting anti-GBM antibody in four of the 19; it was granular and discontinuous, connoting antigen–antibodycomplex deposits, in 13. An immune process may affect glomeruli of renal allografts by mechanisms comparable to those that cause glomerulonephritis in native kidneys. The transplant glomerulonephritis may represent a persistence of the same disease that originally destroyed the host kidneys or the consequence of a new humoral antibody response to allograft antigens.
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