AI Article Synopsis

  • Obesity leads to changes in kidney function, characterized by hyperfiltration and increased sodium reabsorption, which may affect kidney structure, potentially leading to enlarged glomeruli and proximal tubules.
  • A study analyzed kidney biopsies from 11 obese patients with proteinuria and 14 lean patients, finding significant increases in glomerular tuft volume and proximal tubular areas in the obese group.
  • The findings suggest that obesity causes hypertrophy (growth) of kidney tubules and enlarged urinary spaces, likely due to increased filtration rather than an increase in cell numbers.

Article Abstract

Background: Obesity is associated with glomerular hyperfiltration, increased proximal tubular sodium reabsorption, glomerular enlargement and renal hypertrophy. A single experimental study reported an increased glomerular urinary space in obese dogs. Whether proximal tubular volume is increased in obese subjects and whether their glomerular and tubular urinary spaces are enlarged is unknown.

Objective: To determine whether proximal tubules and glomerular and tubular urinary space are enlarged in obese subjects with proteinuria and glomerular hyperfiltration.

Methods: Kidney biopsies from 11 non-diabetic obese with proteinuria and 14 non-diabetic lean patients with a creatinine clearance above 50 ml/min and with mild or no interstitial fibrosis were retrospectively analyzed using morphometric methods. The cross-sectional area of the proximal tubular epithelium and lumen, the volume of the glomerular tuft and of Bowman's space and the nuclei number per tubular profile were estimated.

Results: Creatinine clearance was higher in the obese than in the lean group (P=0.03). Proteinuria was similarly increased in both groups. Compared to the lean group, the obese group displayed a 104% higher glomerular tuft volume (P=0.001), a 94% higher Bowman's space volume (P=0.003), a 33% higher cross-sectional area of the proximal tubular epithelium (P=0.02) and a 54% higher cross-sectional area of the proximal tubular lumen (P=0.01). The nuclei number per proximal tubular profile was similar in both groups, suggesting that the increase in tubular volume is due to hypertrophy and not to hyperplasia.

Conclusions: Obesity-related glomerular hyperfiltration is associated with proximal tubular epithelial hypertrophy and increased glomerular and tubular urinary space volume in subjects with proteinuria. The expanded glomerular and urinary space is probably a direct consequence of glomerular hyperfiltration. These effects may be involved in the pathogenesis of obesity-related renal disease.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3783420PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0075547PLOS

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