Journal article
Visual impairment caused by retinal abnormalities in mesangiocapillary (membranoproliferative) glomerulonephritis type II ("dense deposit disease")
D Colville, R Guymer, RA Sinclair, J Savige
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF KIDNEY DISEASES | W B SAUNDERS CO-ELSEVIER INC | Published : 2003
Abstract
Patients with mesangiocapillary glomerulonephritis (MCGN) type II usually present by early adulthood with hematuria, proteinuria, and renal impairment, and these features often are accompanied by a partial lipodystrophy and an autoantibody for the alternative complement pathway convertase (C3NeF). The diagnosis of MCGN type II depends on the demonstration of "dense deposits" in the glomerular basement membrane (GBM). Most patients also have multiple subretinal white spots or drusen that are histopathologically identical with the GBM deposits and evident ophthalmoscopically by the time renal failure develops. Initially visual acuity and visual fields are preserved, but fluorescein angiography..
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