Morphometric evidence for impairment of renal autoregulation in advanced essential hypertension

2006 
A morphometric study was performed on 22 renal biopsies from hypertensive patients with proteinuria and/or azotemia, with no evidence of other renal disease. These results were compared with our earlier study of normotensive aging kidneys. Afferent arterioles in hypertensive kidneys showed a significant increase in lumen diameter (15.7±4.9 vs 13.4±4.7 μ m, P =0.0007) and wall area (1234±769 vs 998±445 μ m 2 , P =0.037), due primarily to shift in the distribution of arteriolar types, from predominantly normal toward predominantly hyaline arterioles in hypertension. Glomeruli were divided into four basic types: normal, hypertrophic, focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) type, and sclerosing. Overall, glomeruli in hypertensive kidneys were much larger than in normotensive aging kidneys, for example, total capillary area (16 247±10 681 vs 11 624±5702 μ m 2 , P μ m 2 , P =0.0038). There was an excellent correlation between arteriolar lumen diameter and mean glomerular capillary area for hypertrophic/FSGS-type glomeruli ( r =0.4778, P =0.0013), such that as arteriolar diameter increases the mean glomerular capillary area increases, consistent with loss of autoregulation. The morphologic correlates of loss of autoregulation, with afferent arteriolar dilatation and increase in glomerular capillary size, glomerular hypertrophy, and subsequent FSGS, are present on a focal basis in aging kidneys and, much more extensively, although still focally, in hypertensive kidneys.
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