IPLab:Lab 6:Acute Rejection
Contents
Clinical SummaryEdit
This 34-year-old male with end-stage chronic glomerulonephritis had been receiving hemodialysis for 4 months when he received a living related-donor transplantation from his mother. The transplant was successfully with no complications. However, eight days later, transplant rejection necessitated removal of the transplanted kidney. After the nephrectomy, the patient did well and was returned to hemodialysis.
The rejected kidney was edematous and the pale tan-brown cortex was irregularly red-mottled. Upon sectioning the corticomedullary junction was not well-demarcated. The renal papillae were edematous and the renal pelvis had generalized petechial hemorrhages which extended through the 7-cm segment of ureter to a diffusely hemorrhagic terminal portion.
ImagesEdit
Virtual MicroscopyEdit
Study QuestionsEdit
Additional ResourcesEdit
ReferenceEdit
- eMedicine Medical Library: Assessment and Management of the Renal Transplant Patient
- eMedicine Medical Library: Renal Transplantation
- Merck Manual: Nephrotic Syndrome
- Merck Manual: Chronic Kidney Disease
- Merck Manual: Hemodialysis
- Merck Manual: Kidney Transplantation
Journal ArticlesEdit
- Matas AJ. Impact of acute rejection on development of chronic rejection in pediatric renal transplant recipients. Pediatr Transplant 2000 May;4(2):92-9.
ImagesEdit
Related IPLab CasesEdit
An infiltrate is an accumulation of cells in the lung parenchyma--this is a sign of pneumonia.
An infiltrate is an accumulation of cells in the lung parenchyma--this is a sign of pneumonia.