68 patients with immunoglobulin A glomerulonephritis (IgA-GN) were studied. 67.4% of them were men. The most frequent clinical manifestation is the microscopical hematuria--in 39.7% of the patients. A single episode of macroscopic hematuria was found in 32.3% of the patients and recurrent macroscopic hematuria--in 25% of the patients. Proteinuria was found in all patients but nephrotic syndrome--only in one patient. At the time of the biopsy 35.5% of the patients were with hypertension, 13.2%--with initial chronic renal failure. The survival of the patients with IgA--GN, assessed according to the registration life tables, was 93% at the 5-th year, 88% at the 10-th year and 70.6% at the 20-th year. It was statistically higher in the patients without hypertension. Among the patients with proteinuria below 1.0/24 h no one reached terminal chronic renal failure. The male sex was a factor for a statistically shorter survival only at the 20-th year. The survival of the patients with insignificant histological changes was 100% for the period of the study, whereas it was significantly lower for the other histological variants. According to the data of the study, the presence of arterial hypertension, proteinuria above 1.0 g/24 h, a more severe histological variant (focal-segment, diffuse proliferative and particularly sclerotic), and to a certain degree the male sex play an unfavorable role in the survival and determine a poorer prognosis for the patients with IgA-GN.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

patients
12
survival patients
12
patients proteinuria
8
patients hypertension
8
chronic renal
8
renal failure
8
20-th year
8
male sex
8
[the survival
4
patients mesangial
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!