Renal Pathology, Set 4

For each of the following clinical histories, match the most closely associated glomerular disease:

1. A blood pressure check on a 58-year-old woman shows a reading of 168/109 mm Hg. Her urinalysis shows pH 7.0, sp.gr. 1.020, 1+ protein, no blood, no glucose, and no ketones. An abdominal ultrasound reveals that her kidneys are quite small, with no masses. Her antinuclear antibody test is negative. Her serum urea nitrogen is 51 mg/dL with creatinine of 4.7 mg/dL. Her hemoglobin AIC is 3.6 ng/dL. An abdominal ultrasound shows that both kidneys are small:

2. A 25-year-old man has malaise for several weeks. A urinalysis reveals 4+ proteinuria but no blood or ketones. His serum urea nitrogen is 31 mg/dL. His antinuclear antibody and antineutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibody tests are negative. A renal biopsy reveals some glomeruli that are partially involved with loss of glomerular tufts replaced by a trichrome positive material. He is given a course of corticosteroid therapy but does not respond. He progresses to chronic renal failure over the next 10 years. He receives a living-related renal transplant, but his renal disease recurs within 2 years:

- GO TO: INDEX - -

A. Amyloidosis B. Chronic glomerulonephritis C. Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis D. Goodpasture's syndrome
E. Hemolytic-uremic syndrome F. Hereditary nephritis G. IgA nephropathy H. Infective endocarditis
I. Lupus nephritis J. Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis, type II K. Membranous glomerulonephritis L. Minimal change disease
M. Nodular glomerulosclerosis N. Polyarteritis nodosa O. Postinfectious glomerulonephritis P. Wegener's granulomatosis