RESUMEN
Several studies reported the effect of obesity on the progression of IgA nephropathy (IgAN). However, the impact of obesity on the clinicopathologic presentation of IgAN remains uncertain. This is a retrospective cross-sectional study from eight university hospitals in South Korea. Patients were categorized into three groups using the Asia-Pacific obesity classification based on body mass index (BMI). Clinical and histopathologic data at the time of renal biopsy were analyzed. Among 537 patients with IgAN, the obese group was more hypertensive and had lower estimated glomerular filtration rate and more proteinuria than other groups. The histologic scores for mesangial matrix expansion (MME), interstitial fibrosis, tubular atrophy, and mesangial C3 deposition differed significantly between the three groups. Among these histopathologic parameters, BMI was independently positively associated with MME score on multivariable linear regression analysis (p = 0.028). Using multivariable logistic regression analysis, the obese group was independently associated with higher MME scores compared to the normal weight/overweight group (p = 0.020). However, BMI was not independently associated with estimated glomerular filtration rate or proteinuria on multivariable analysis. Obesity was independently associated with severe MME in patients with IgAN. Obesity may play an important pathogenetic role in mesangial lesions seen in IgAN.
RESUMEN
Spontaneous renal artery dissection is a rare disease and an uncommon cause of renal infarction. The patient was a man who presented to the emergency room with sudden-onset right flank pain. Computed tomography revealed right renal infarction; thus, anticoagulation was initiated. Renal angiography revealed luminal narrowing of the segmental artery to the superior pole of right kidney without a dissection flap or false lumen. We stopped anticoagulation due to a lack of evidence of thrombi or luminal narrowing of the dissected vessels. When patients present with acute flank pain, it is important to suspect renal infarction and to perform a correct diagnostic workup, even when the patient shows normal urinalysis results and a normal LDH value.