Back to Search Start Over

Glomerular epithelial foot processes and filtration slits in IDDM patients.

Authors :
Bjørn SF
Bangstad HJ
Hanssen KF
Nyberg G
Walker JD
Viberti GC
Osterby R
Source :
Diabetologia [Diabetologia] 1995 Oct; Vol. 38 (10), pp. 1197-204.
Publication Year :
1995

Abstract

Diabetic nephropathy is associated with functional changes in the glomerular filtration barrier but the structural counterpart remains unknown. Width of glomerular epithelial cell foot processes and of filtration slits were determined by morphometric methods in 11 non-diabetic kidney donors and in 28 diabetic patients with albumin excretion rates ranging from normal to proteinuria. Foot process width was estimated from the ratio of tuft surface density to length density of slits. At high magnification independently sampled, perpendicularly cut slits were classified. Foot process width on peripheral basement membrane was increased in microalbuminuric compared to normoalbuminuric diabetic patients (p<0.05) but showed no significant correlation with the level of albumin excretion when patients with increased barrier permeability were considered. Width of filtration slits in normo- and microalbuminuric diabetic patients exceeded that in non-diabetic control subjects (p<0.05). Filtration slits were narrower in patients with overt proteinuria than in patients with microalbuminuria (p<0.05) and correlated with glomerular filtration rate in all of the diabetic patients (r=0.65, p<0.005). The results show that insulin-dependent diabetic patients with nephropathy present changes of epithelial cells and filtration slits, demonstrable already in the stage of microalbuminuria. The mechanism of albumin leakage is not achieved by these measures. The dimension of filtration slits may play a contributing role in the level of glomerular filtration rate in diabetic patients.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0012-186X
Volume :
38
Issue :
10
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Diabetologia
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
8690172
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00422369