Three-dimensional analysis of glomerular morphology in patients with subtotal nephrectomy

A Remuzzi, M Mazerska, GN Gephardt, AC Novick… - Kidney international, 1995 - Elsevier
A Remuzzi, M Mazerska, GN Gephardt, AC Novick, BM Brenner, G Remuzzi
Kidney international, 1995Elsevier
Three-dimensional analysis of glomerular morphology in patients with subtotal
nephrectomy. Previous studies documented that single section examination of kidney tissue
underestimates glomerulosclerosis and that three-dimensional examination of glomerular
morphology improves recognition of the incidence and distribution of sclerotic changes
within the glomerular capillary tuft. We have adopted this technique to evaluate the true
frequency and the spatial extent of glomerulosclerosis in patients who were subjected to …
Three-dimensional analysis of glomerular morphology in patients with subtotal nephrectomy. Previous studies documented that single section examination of kidney tissue underestimates glomerulosclerosis and that three-dimensional examination of glomerular morphology improves recognition of the incidence and distribution of sclerotic changes within the glomerular capillary tuft. We have adopted this technique to evaluate the true frequency and the spatial extent of glomerulosclerosis in patients who were subjected to extensive renal mass reduction. We re-evaluated four kidney biopsies of patients with a solitary kidney who had undergone partial nephrectomy for renal-cell carcinoma. Histopathological examination aimed at detection of glomerular sclerotic lesions was performed on serial sections (from 75 to 93 serial sections for each biopsy, 3 µm thick) together with three-dimensional morphometric analysis of glomerular tuft and sclerotic areas using a computer-based image processing system. Results were compared with observations based on more conventional single section evaluation of the same biopsies. Among 65 glomeruli examined by three-dimensional morphometric analysis, only 8% were normal, 42% revealed segmental sclerosis and 51% global sclerosis. These results confirmed that single section evaluation grossly overestimates the number of normal glomeruli (37% vs. 8%, respectively), since the majority of glomeruli classified as normal are indeed affected by sclerotic changes in areas typically out of the section plane. The three-dimensional distribution of sclerosis is characterized by the appearance of multi-focal areas affecting a small capillary tuft volume (<10%/) which ultimately propagate to the entire capillary tuft. Despite the maintenance of renal function, at the time of biopsy in patients with extensive ablation of renal mass, the incidence of glomerulosclerosis affects almost the entire glomerular population. These data suggest sclerotic lesions initially arise as multifocal lesions within the capillary tuft, and eventually propagate to global sclerosis.
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