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The Renal Pathology of Obesity: Structure-Function Correlations

Nobuo Tsuboi, Yusuke Okabayashi

2021Seminars in Nephrology29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The kidney is one of the target organs that may show health disorders as a result of obesity. Obesity-related glomerulopathy (ORG) is a kidney disease category based on a biopsy diagnosis that may occur secondary to obesity. Detailed clinicopathologic observations of ORG have provided significant knowledge regarding obesity-associated renal complications. Glomerulomegaly with focal segmental glomerulosclerosis of perihilar locations is a typical renal histopathologic finding in ORG, which has long been considered to represent a state of single-nephron glomerular hyperfiltration. This hypothesis was recently confirmed in ORG patients by estimating single-nephron glomerular filtration rate using a combined image analysis and biopsy-based stereology. Overshooting in glomerulotubular and tubuloglomerular interactions may lead to glomerular hyperfiltration/hypertension, podocyte failure, tubular protein-traffic overload, and tubulointerstitial scarring, constituting a vicious cycle of a common pathway to the further loss of functioning nephrons and the progression of kidney functional impairment.

Topics & Concepts

NephronRenal functionGlomerular hyperfiltrationGlomerulopathyMedicineFocal segmental glomerulosclerosisKidneyKidney diseasePodocytePathologyBiopsyRenal biopsyRenal pathologyGlomerulosclerosisUrologyInternal medicineGlomerulonephritisProteinuriaDiabetic nephropathyChronic Kidney Disease and DiabetesBirth, Development, and HealthRenal Diseases and Glomerulopathies
The Renal Pathology of Obesity: Structure-Function Correlations | Litcius