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NDT Advance Access published online on February 28, 2008

Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation, doi:10.1093/ndt/gfn039
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© The Author [2008]. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of ERA-EDTA. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org



Renal pathology, glomerular number and volume in a West African urban community

Bridgette J. McNamara1, Boucar Diouf2, Michael D. Hughson3, Rebecca N. Douglas-Denton1, Wendy E. Hoy4 and John F. Bertram1

1 Department of Anatomy and Developmental Biology, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia 2 Hôpital Aristide Le Dantec, Dakar, Senegal 3 University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson, Mississippi, USA 4 Centre for Chronic Disease, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia

Correspondence and offprint requests to: John F. Bertram, Department of Anatomy and Developmental Biology, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria, 3800. Australia. Tel: +61-3-99052751; Fax: +61-3-99052462; E-mail: john.bertram{at}med.monash.edu.au



  Abstract

Background. Low glomerular number and large glomerular volume are hypothesized to be risk factors for hypertensive renal disease in adult life. Reports of human glomerular number are based on studies from developed nations and have found single kidney mean values of ~900 000 per kidney with a roughly 8-fold range matched by a similar range in glomerular volume. Glomerular number and volume have never been investigated in people from a developing country.

Methods. This study analysed the pathology of 81 autopsy kidneys from Dakar, Senegal, and determined total glomerular number and mean glomerular volume in 28 of these kidneys using the physical disector/fractionator method.

Results. Total glomerular number ranged 2.6-fold from 536 171 to 1 394 010, with a mean of 925 485 nephrons. The mean glomerular volume was 5.74 µm3 x 106 with a 2.5-fold variation that was strongly and inversely correlated with total glomerular number. Glomerular number was inversely correlated with age, and age-associated increases in arteriosclerosis, cortical fibrosis and glomerulosclerosis were observed. Arteriolar nephrosclerosis was observed in 34% of adults. Mean glomerular number in this Dakar population was similar to that previously reported for people from developed nations, while the range of glomerular number and mean glomerular volume was much narrower.

Conclusions. The frequency of arteriolar nephrosclerosis in these Senegalese adults was high (34%), suggesting that hypertensive kidney disease could contribute to a large burden of future chronic kidney disease in this population. Unusually low glomerular number or large glomerular volume do not appear to provide a basis for this potential burden of kidney disease.

Keywords: arteriosclerosis; developing world; glomerular volume; nephron number; renal pathology; Senegal; stereology

Received for publication: 5.10.07
Accepted in revised form: 21. 1.08


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