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Summary Lecture 21 + 22 - Research on Nephropathology

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Lecture 21 22 - Research on Nephropathology

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August 14, 2019
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Principles and practice of Human Pathology – Lecture 18 + 19 (22-6-2018):
Research on Nephropathology (Experimental nephropathology)

Glomerular filtration barrier:
- Nephrotic syndrome: heavy proteinuria, hypoalbuminemia, hyperlipidemia and
edema
o Cause: a leaky filter

Pre-urine contains about 10kg of protein
Only 1g of the protein passes the glomerular filtration barrier of the kidney  filter is
really selective.

The classical model of glomerular permselectivity:
The filter:
Glomerular filtration barrier is size and charge selective  negatively charged
molecules cannot pass.

Why does the filter never clog?
Hypothesis: Due to filtration of charged molecules there is an electric potential over
the filtration barrier. Any molecule in the barrier will be removed by electrophoresis
Problem: how to measure an electric current in something so small as the glomerular
complex?

Mudpuppy:
Mudpuppy have similar glomeruli to human, but much larger.

Electrical forces determine glomerular permeability:
Positively charged  into the urine.
Negatively charged  into the blood.

Proteinuria and podocyte foot process effacement:
Proteinuria: loss of filtration leads to an increased permeability (loss of the electric
potential).

Loss of the electrophoresis force  filter becomes leaky.

The electrokinetic model:
This concept turns the glomerular filter from a passive into an active and dynamic
filter, with a self-cleating mechanism and variable size and charge selectivity.

Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS):
Sclerosis = scarring.

Focal: not all glomeruli are affected
Segmental: only a part of the glomerulus is affected.


Development of FSGS lesions:
- The role of parietal epithelial cells (PECs).
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