American Journal of Nephrology

Clinical Study

Acute Renal Failure in Man: New Aspects Concerning Pathogenesis

A Morphometric Study

Bohle A.a · Christensen J.b · Kokot F.c · Osswald H.d · Schubert B.a · Kendziorra H.a · Pressler H.a · Marcovic-Lipkovski J.a

Author affiliations

Institutes of aPathology and dPharmacology, University of Tübingen, FRG; bThe Gade Institute, University of Bergen, Norway; cDepartment of Nephrology, Silesian School of Medicine, Katowice, Poland

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Am J Nephrol 1990;10:374–388

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Article / Publication Details

First-Page Preview
Abstract of Clinical Study

Received: June 21, 1989
Accepted: February 20, 1990
Published online: October 28, 2008
Issue release date: 1990

Number of Print Pages: 15
Number of Figures: 0
Number of Tables: 0

ISSN: 0250-8095 (Print)
eISSN: 1421-9670 (Online)

For additional information: https://www.karger.com/AJN

Abstract

The morphometric investigation of the proximal and distal tubules, the cortical interstitium, the inter-tubular capillaries, the renal corpuscles and the juxtaglomerular apparatuses (JGAs) in 56 cases in the oligoanuric, polyuric, and normuric phases of human acute renal failure (ARF), 6 cases of myeloma kidney with clinically confirmed ARF and 21 control kidneys revealed the following: (1) The main pathological change in human ARF is swelling of the epithelial cells of the proximal and distal tubules. Necrosis of these cells was observed in some cases but usually only as single cell necroses. (2) The interstitium of the cortex and of the outer stripe of the outer medulla is significantly widened in most cases of ARF. (3) In proximal tubules proximal to occluding casts (which were observed only in the plasmacytoma cases), the lumina are not widened but are narrower than normal, and the cross-sectional area of the epithelium is not greater but smaller than normal. (4) The JGAs were significantly larger in kidneys in the oligoanuric phase of ARF (with 1 exception) than in normal kidneys. In the normuric and polyuric phases they were slightly (not significantly) smaller than normal. In myeloma kidneys with occluding casts and/or diffuse interstitial fibrosis, the JGAs were significantly smaller than normal. From these findings it is concluded that: (1) The fall in glomerular filtration rate (GFR) in the postshock phase of ARF is not caused by nonselective back-diffusion of the primary urine through necrotic tubules or by compression of the lumina of the proximal and distal tubules by interstitial edema. A fall in GFR associated with occluding casts in the distal tubules is found only in the myeloma kidney and does not lead to widening of the proximal tubules but to tubular atrophy and narrowing of the lumen. (2) The casts seen in the lumina of the ascending limb of Henle’s loop in some cases of ARF, which consist of hemoglobin, Tamm-Horsfall protein or desquamated blebs, do not occlude the lumen, since they are not associated with atrophy or luminal dilatation of the proximal tubules. (3) The JGAs with their secretory product renin-angiotensin II, together with adenosine, which is released in kidneys with ischemic or toxic damage, play a critical role in the pathogenesis of ARF. (4) In myeloma kidneys with ARF, in which the JGAs are markedly atrophic, the potentiated effect of adenosine that has been observed with a chronic absence of urine flow probably leads to a progressive, irreversible drop in GFR associated with tubular atrophy.

© 1990 S. Karger AG, Basel




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Article / Publication Details

First-Page Preview
Abstract of Clinical Study

Received: June 21, 1989
Accepted: February 20, 1990
Published online: October 28, 2008
Issue release date: 1990

Number of Print Pages: 15
Number of Figures: 0
Number of Tables: 0

ISSN: 0250-8095 (Print)
eISSN: 1421-9670 (Online)

For additional information: https://www.karger.com/AJN


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