Publications by authors named "Alana Dasgupta"

Article Synopsis
  • Proteins are filtered from blood by the glomerular filtration barrier and then reabsorbed by proximal tubular epithelial cells (PTECs), which create tubular protein reabsorption droplets (TPRDs) from these proteins.
  • A study analyzing 109 kidney biopsies found a negative correlation between albumin TPRDs and proteinuria, while positive correlations were observed between proteinuria and IgG TPRDs and acute tubular necrosis (ATN).
  • The findings suggest that healthy PTECs are crucial for managing protein levels in urine, as their effectiveness declines with conditions like ATN, leading to increased proteinuria.
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Introduction: Antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody-associated vasculitis (AAV) with renal involvement primarily affects the renal cortex and presents with key histopathologic findings of a pauci-immune necrotizing and crescentic glomerulonephritis. Infrequently reported and poorly characterized is renal medullary angiitis (RMA), a pathologic variant of AAV primarily involving the renal medulla. This study seeks to describe the presentation and treatment outcomes of RMA.

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Anticoagulant related nephropathy (ARN) is the result of glomerular hemorrhage in patients on systemic anticoagulation therapy or underlying coagulopathy. Red blood cells (RBC) that passed through the glomerular filtration barrier form RBC casts in the tubules, increase oxidative stress and result in acute tubular necrosis (ATN). The mechanisms of ARN still not completely discovered.

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Background: Although is the leading cause of acute infective endocarditis (IE) in adults, spp. has concomitantly emerged as the leading cause of "blood culture-negative IE" (BCNE). Pre-disposing factors, clinical presentation and kidney biopsy findings in Bartonella IE-associated glomerulonephritis (GN) show subtle differences and some unique features relative to other bacterial infection-related GNs.

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Amyloidosis is an infiltrative disease caused by misfolded proteins depositing in tissues. Amyloid infiltrates the kidney in several patterns. There are, as currently described by the International Society of Amyloidosis, 14 types of amyloid that can involve the kidney, and these types may have different locations or clinical settings.

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Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is characterized by increased interstitial fibrosis and tubular atrophy (IFTA) in the kidney. Chronic hematuria is a hallmark of several human kidney diseases and often is seen in patients on anticoagulation therapy. We had previously demonstrated that chronic hematuria associated with warfarin increases IFTA in 5/6 nephrectomy (5/6NE) rats, and such treatment increases reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the kidney.

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Introduction: Thrombotic microangiopathy (TMA) on kidney biopsy shows a variable combination of features: arterial mucoid intimal thickening, acellular closure of glomerular capillary loops, fragmented red blood cells, fibrin thrombi, and arterial fibrinoid necrosis. However, some early post-transplant kidney biopsies show only arterial mucoid intimal thickening. We aimed to elucidate the importance of this finding.

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BK virus maintains a latent infection that is ubiquitous in humans. It has a propensity for reactivation in the setting of a dysfunctional cellular immune response and is frequently encountered in kidney transplant recipients. Screening for the virus has been effective in preventing progression to nephropathy and graft loss.

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