1.Patterns of renal injury in type 2 diabetic patients with macroalbuminuria
Pengjie XU ; Hang LI ; Yalan XU ; Yubing WEN ; Xuewang LI
Chinese Journal of Nephrology 2009;25(4):255-260
Objective To find out a more rational pathological classification criteria for renal injury in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. Methods The renal clinicopathological features of forty-nine type 2 diabetic patients with maeroalbuminuria were collected and were compared retrospectively. The patients without diabetic renal disease were excluded. According to the pathological features, the patients were divided into two groups: typical diabetic glomerulopathy (DG) and atypical diabetes-related renal disease (ADRD). Results The renal biopsy revealed DG accounted for 59.2% of the patients, while the remaining 40.8% presented atypical renal injury defined as ADRD. In DG group, volume fraction of mesangium per glomerulus, glomerular basement membrane width, atrophic tubules index, intersititium injury index and prevalence of hyalinization of renal arteriole were higher; podocyte density per glomerulus was lower; duration of type 2 diabetes was longer; the level of fast blood glucose, systolic blood pressure, mean arterial pressure, proteinuria and prevalence of diabetic retinopathy (DR) were higher; glomerular filtration rate (GFR) was lower. In ADRD group, body mass index and prevalence of obesity were higher; dyslipidemia was more severe. GFR was negatively correlated with glomerular global sclerosis rate in both DG and ADRD group. Proteinuria was positively correlated with volume fraction of mesangium per glomerulus in DG. No correlation between proteinuria and pathological features was found in ADRD. DR (94.8%) and duration of type 2 diabetes over five years (90.7%) had high negative predictive value for DG. Conclusions Renal injuries in type 2 diabetes patients are heterogeneous. ADRD is an atypical renal injury in type 2 diabetes patients whieh is different from DG. DR and duration of diabetes are more helpful in predicting DG separating from ADRD.
2.Analysis of clinicopathological features in type 2 diabetes mellitus complicated with chronic kidney diseases
Pengjie XU ; Hang LI ; Yalan XU ; Yubing WEN ; Xuewang LI
Chinese Journal of Nephrology 2010;26(10):731-735
Objective To study the pathologic pattern and clinical feature of type 2 diabetes mellitus complicated with chronic kidney diseases (CKD). Methods Clinicopathological features of 155 type 2 diabetic patients complicated with CKD were collected and analyzed retrospectively. The patients were divided into four groups: typical diabetic glomerulopathy (DG),atypical diabetes-related renal disease (ADRD), non-diabetic renal diseases (NDRD) and DG complicated with NDRD. Results Renal biopsies revealed DG accounted for 18.7% of the patients, ADRD accounted for 12.9%, NDRD accounted for 60.0%, and DG complicated with NDRD accounted for 8.4%. In DG group, duration of type 2 diabetes was longer;the level of fast blood glucose, systolic blood pressure, mean arterial pressure and prevalence of diabetic retinopathy (DR) were higher;proteinuria was heavier and evaluated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) was lower. In ADRD group, body mass index and prevalence of obesity were higher;dyslipidemia was more severe. Gross hematuria and acute renal insufficiency could be only found in NDRD group.Without DR, duration of diabetes under 5 years, gross hematuria, acute renal insufficiency,evidences of autoimmune diseases and proteinuria≥3.5 g/24 h but eGFR ≥60 ml/min were specific valuable predictors for NDRD. Conclusions Renal injuries in type 2 diabetic patients are structural heterogeneous, in which NDRD is more common and is different from ADRD and DG.Renal biopsy should be considered when type 2 diabetic patients complicated with CKD present at least one characteristic as follows: duration of diabetes under 5 years, without DR, history of gross hematuria, acute decrease of renal function, evidences of autoimmune diseases and proteinuria ≥ 3.5 g/24 h but eGFR ≥ 60 ml/min.
3.Clinical analysis of 12 cases of primary urethral carcinoma
Bin JIN ; Zhengtong LV ; Hong MA ; Wei ZHANG ; Miao WANG ; Lingfeng MENG ; Wen LIU ; Yaoguang ZHANG ; Pengjie WU
Chinese Journal of Geriatrics 2023;42(2):196-201
Objective:To investigate the clinical features, diagnosis, treatment and prognosis of primary urethral carcinoma.Methods:The clinical and follow-up data of 12 patients with primary urethral carcinoma admitted to Beijing Hospital from July 2016 to December 2020 were retrospectively analyzed.Results:There were four males and eight females, with an average age of 66.3(53~75)years.Nine patients underwent magnetic resonance examination before operation, and eight patients presented with abnormal urethral signals.The clinical stage of female patients was generally later than those of male patients, and all patients received surgical treatment.Four male patients did not receive post-operative adjuvant treatment, and all of them attained disease-free survival.Among the eight female patients, four patients received postoperative adjuvant radiotherapy or chemotherapy, five patients had recurrence or metastasis during follow-up, and two patients died.Conclusions:The clinical stage of female urethral cancer is later than that of male.MRI examination is beneficial to the determination of local invasion of urethral cancer.For female proximal urethral cancer and male posterior urethral cancer, radical resection has a good therapeutic effect.
4.Cortical Organization of Centrifugal Afferents to the Olfactory Bulb: Mono- and Trans-synaptic Tracing with Recombinant Neurotropic Viral Tracers.
Pengjie WEN ; Xiaoping RAO ; Liuying XU ; Zhijian ZHANG ; Fan JIA ; Xiaobin HE ; Fuqiang XU
Neuroscience Bulletin 2019;35(4):709-723
Sensory processing is strongly modulated by different brain and behavioral states, and this is based on the top-down modulation. In the olfactory system, local neural circuits in the olfactory bulb (OB) are innervated by centrifugal afferents in order to regulate the processing of olfactory information in the OB under different behavioral states. The purpose of the present study was to explore the organization of neural networks in olfactory-related cortices and modulatory nuclei that give rise to direct and indirect innervations to the glomerular layer (GL) of the OB at the whole-brain scale. Injection of different recombinant attenuated neurotropic viruses into the GL showed that it received direct inputs from each layer in the OB, centrifugal inputs from the ipsilateralanterior olfactory nucleus (AON), anterior piriform cortex (Pir), and horizontal limb of diagonal band of Broca (HDB), and various indirect inputs from bilateral cortical neurons in the AON, Pir, amygdala, entorhinal cortex, hippocampus, HDB, dorsal raphe, median raphe and locus coeruleus. These results provide a circuitry basis that will help further understand the mechanism by which olfactory information-processing in the OB is regulated.