Glomerulonephritis pathophysiology
https://https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zucxZw069kw%7C350}} |
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]
Glomerulonephritis Main page |
|
---|
Pathophysiology
Microscopic Pathology
-
Glomerulonephritis: Micro H&E med mag; an excellent example of AGN with many neutrophils
-
Acute Glomerulonephritis: Micro H&E high mag; an excellent example of acute exudative glomerulonephritis.
Glomerulonephritis Videos
Rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis
{{#ev:youtube|CqSyj4cVZPE}}
Chronic glomerulonephritis
{{#ev:youtube|eA1vYarRAWo}}
Images
-
This is a low-power photomicrograph of a saggital section of end stage chronic glomerulonephritis (GN). Note the marked thinning of the cortex (arrow).
-
This is a higher-power photomicrograph of hyalinized glomeruli (arrows) and glomeruli with thick basement membranes.
-
This is a higher-power photomicrograph of hyalinized glomeruli (1) and glomeruli with thickened basement membranes (2).
-
This is a photomicrograph of interstitial and vascular lesions in end stage renal disease.
-
This is an immunofluorescent photomicrograph of granular membranous immunofluorescence (immune complex disease). The antibody used for these studies was specific for IgG.
-
This is an electron micrograph of subepithelial granular electron dense deposits (arrows) which correspond to the granular immunofluorescence seen in the previous image.
-
This is a photomicrograph of a glomerulus from another case with acute poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis. In this case the immune complex glomerular disease is ongoing with necrosis and accumulation of neutrophils in the glomerulus.
-
This immunofluorescent photomicrograph of a glomerulus from a case of acute poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis shows a granular immunofluorescence pattern consistent with immune complex disease. The primary antibody used for this staining was specific for IgG; however antibodies for complement would show a similar pattern.
-
This electron micrograph demonstrates scattered subepithelial dense deposits (arrows) and a polymorphonuclear leukocyte in the lumen.
-
For comparison this is an immunofluorescent photomicrograph of a glomerulus from a patient with Goodpasture's syndrome. The linear (arrows) immunofluorescence is characteristic of Goodpasture's syndrome.