1.Juxtaglomerular cell tumor of the kidney: a case report.
Ki Ouk MIN ; Hi Jeong KWON ; Seok Joo AHN ; Sang Ah CHANG ; Yoon Sik CHANG ; Byung Kee BANG ; Jin KIM ; Moon Hyang PARK ; Eun Sun JUNG ; Young Jin CHOI ; Eun Joo SEO ; Byung Kee KIM
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2001;16(2):233-236
We report a case of renin-secreting juxtaglomerular cell tumor which developed in a hypertensive 47-yr-old Korean man. Presumptive clinical diagnosis was made before surgery based on the high level of plasma renin and the radiologic evidence of renal mass. Grossly, a round, bulging, well-encapsulated mass of 3x3 cm was located in the mid-portion of the right kidney. On microscopic examination, the tumor was composed of ovoid to polyhedral cells with bland nuclei, indistinct nucleoli and light eosinophilic cytoplasm. The immunostaining for renin showed strong positivity in the cytoplasm of tumor cells. The characteristic rhomboid shaped renin protogranules were observed in ultrastructural analysis.
Human
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Hypertension, Renal/*etiology/pathology
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Juxtaglomerular Apparatus/*pathology
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Kidney Neoplasms/*complications/*pathology/secretion
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Male
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Middle Age
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Renin/blood/secretion
2.Changes of renal vein renin activity in patients with unilateral atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis.
Qi ZHANG ; Wei-feng SHEN ; Rui-yan ZHANG ; Jian-sheng ZHANG ; Jian HU ; Xian ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Cardiology 2005;33(6):539-542
OBJECTIVETo assess plasma renin activity (PRA) of renal veins in patients with unilateral renal artery atherosclerotic stenosis and its relationship with blood pressure changes after renal artery stenting.
METHODSFifty patients with significantly unilateral renal artery stenosis (lumen loss > or = 70%) and coronary artery stenosis were included. Bilateral renal vein and peripheral PRA and angiotensin II were determined and their relations with blood pressure changes after stenting were analyzed.
RESULTSAll patients were revascularized successfully for both coronary and renal artery stenosis. PRA in the ischemic kidney was significantly higher than that in the contralateral kidney (1.44 +/- 1.73 ng.ml(-1).h(-1) vs 1.27 +/- 1.57 ng.ml(-1).h(-1), P = 0.04). Ischemic and contralateral renal vein renin ratio (RVRR) was > or = 1.5 in 14 patients (28%) (renal vascular hypertension, RVH group). During follow-up (12 +/- 9 months), blood pressure returned to normal in 9 patients after revascularization, 7 were of RVH group (50%) and 2 were in control group (6%) (P < 0.001). Multivariate logistic analysis indicated RVRR > or = 1.5 was significantly related to the decrease of hypertension after renal artery stenting (OR = 3.15, 95% CI = 1.49 approximately 5.97, P = 0.02).
CONCLUSIONSPRA was significantly increased in the ischemic kidney in about one-third of patients with unilateral renal artery stenosis. Hypertension could be controlled easily to normal value after renal artery stenting in half of the patients with RVRR > or = 1.5. Measurement of renal vein renin activity in patients with renal artery stenosis is very useful in evaluating the effects of renal artery stenting on hypertension.
Aged ; Angiotensin II ; blood ; Blood Pressure ; Female ; Follow-Up Studies ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Renal Artery Obstruction ; metabolism ; Renal Veins ; metabolism ; secretion ; Renin ; metabolism