Subject(s)
Fluorescent Antibody Technique , Heparin/pharmacology , Hypertension/complications , Kidney Glomerulus/physiopathology , Thrombosis/complications , Aging , Animals , Blood Pressure , Blood Urea Nitrogen , Creatinine/blood , Kidney Glomerulus/pathology , Kidney Glomerulus/ultrastructure , Microscopy, Fluorescence , Rats , Statistics as TopicABSTRACT
A serendipitous finding in the kidneys examined by light, electron, and immunofluorescence microscopy (LM, EM, and IFM, respectively) in mongrel dogs infused intravenously with epinephrine (4 microgram per kg per min) alone or in combination with therapeutic agents over a six hour period was proliferating epithelial cells in Bowman's space and adhesion to the Bowman's membrane (crescent). This lesion was observed in 10 of 17 dogs. In five, over 50 percent of the glomeruli were involved. In seven additional dogs infused with epinephrine, renal biopsy studies (LM) at 0, 3 and 6 hr periods revealed crescents only in the six hr specimens. By EM, the crescents were composed of actively proliferating epithelial cells with many large mitochondria containing conspicuous intramitochondrial particles. Fibrin was found within glomerular and peritubular capillaries, within tubules but rarely in the crescent. IFM revealed granular deposits of IgG only in the glomerular basement membrane and mesangium. Other changes included necrosis of the tubules in all dogs receiving epinephrine alone and necrosis of arterioles in some of the dogs studied. Dogs receiving normal saline infusions (control) did not reveal any abnormalities in the kidney. This model should prove useful in determining the morphogenesis of crescent formation and in evaluating the effect of therapeutic agents in the prevention of this lesion.
Subject(s)
Epinephrine/pharmacology , Kidney Diseases/chemically induced , Kidney Glomerulus/drug effects , Animals , Basement Membrane/drug effects , Basement Membrane/ultrastructure , Capillaries/ultrastructure , Dogs , Epithelium/ultrastructure , Fluorescent Antibody Technique , Immunoglobulin G/analysis , Kidney Glomerulus/immunology , Kidney Glomerulus/ultrastructure , Kidney Tubular Necrosis, Acute/chemically induced , Kidney Tubular Necrosis, Acute/pathology , Tissue AdhesionsABSTRACT
A patient with an autoimmune thrombocytopenic syndrome was treated unsuccessfully with splenectomy. Treatment with corticosteroids and 6-mercaptopurine was partially successful, but the patient developed peripheral neuropathy and over signs of Hodgkin's disease. The latter reponded completely to radiation therapy, but the thrombocytopenia was not reversed until combination chemotherapy was given. The association of thrombocytopenia with Hodgkin's disease is reviewed.