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Membranoproliferative Glomerulonephritis and α1-Antitrypsin Deficiency in Children
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1983
Year
Glomerular DiseaseImmunodeficienciesRenal PathologyImmunologyPathologyAutoimmune Liver DiseaseGlomerulonephritisα1-Antitrypsin DeficiencyIga GlomerulonephritisAutoantibodiesChronic Kidney DiseaseWhite GirlsAutoimmune DiseaseLupus NephritisAutoimmunityImmunologic DiseaseImmune-mediated Inflammatory DiseasesRenal PathophysiologyPhenotype ZzInborn Error Of ImmunityHepatologyGlomerulopathyMedicineNephrologyImmunoglobulin A
Two white girls had reduced serum concentration of α1-antitrypsin (α-AT), phenotype ZZ, and liver disease. Hepatocytes exhibited the microscopic criteria of α-AT deficiency. Hypocomplementemia, elevated circulating immune complexes (patient 1), clinical signs of renal disease, and the histologic findings of membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (MPGN) type I developed. Immunoglobulin A (but not α-AT) was demonstrable immunologically as a component of glomerular deposits in patient 1. Among 53 patients with MPGN but without clinical signs of liver disease, none had Pi type Z. Among 23 patients with phenotype ZZ but without clinical signs of kidney disease, six had abnormal complement protein levels, but the pattern did not resemble that of idiopathic MPGN type I. These results are consistent with the conclusion that MPGN in the two patients reported here is a consequence of their chronic liver disease and is not directly related to the presence of the allelic α-AT variant PiZ.