Complement in overt and asymptomatic nephritis after skin infection.

In an ongoing study of streptococcal skin infection and acute glomerulonephritis (AGN) begun in 1964, C'3 determinations were done in 784 patients. There were 126 patients with acute poststreptococcal nephritis, 172 of their siblings, and 486 patients with uncomplicated impetigo from families without an index case of nephritis.90% of the patients with nephritis were infected with one of the four prevalent streptococcal serotypes associated with nephritis in this population; only 12% of patients with uncomplicated impetigo were infected with similar serotypes.93% of the patients with overt nephritis had diminished complement levels. Low complement was more often observed (8%) in AGN siblings than was transient hypertension and/or hematuria (5%). Considering the relationship of low C'3 alone and low C'3 preceded hematuria in four others. Two (0.4%) of the patients with uncomplicated impetigo had low complement values, both of whom were infected with nephritogenic strains. Transient hematuria and/or hypertension was less frequently observed (2.7%) among patients with uncomplicated impetigo. Serial determinations in patients with low complement revealed a return to normal in a linear fashion within 2-12 wk. The validity of the hypothesis that the asymptomatic patients with low complement levels, with or without hematuria, likely had subclinical nephritis is strengthened by the accompanying epidemiologic data. The finding of low complement before the onset of, or in the absence of, hematuria or other evidence of nephritis supports the concept that an immunologic mechanism may precipitate the renal injury of acute streptococcal nephritis.

[1]  S. Gotoff,et al.  Serum Beta1C Globulin in Glomerulonephritis and Systemic Lupus Erythematosus , 1969 .

[2]  A. J. Mcadams,et al.  A "silent" phase of hypocomplementemic persistent nephritis detectable by reduced serum beta-1c-globulin levels. , 1969, Jornal de Pediatria.

[3]  H. Dillon,et al.  Impetigo contagiosa: suppurative and non-suppurative complications. I. Clinical, bacteriologic, and epidemiologic characteristics of impetigo. , 1968, American journal of diseases of children.

[4]  H. Gewurz,et al.  The complement profile in acute glomerulonephritis systemic lupus erythematosus and hypocomplementemic chronic glomerulonephritis. Contrasts and experimental correlations. , 1968, International archives of allergy and applied immunology.

[5]  W. R. Maxted,et al.  The epidemiology of impetigo and acute glomerulonephritis. Results of serological typing of group A streptococci. , 1967, American journal of epidemiology.

[6]  L. Wannamaker,et al.  Skin infections and acute nephritis in American Indian children. , 1967, Pediatrics.

[7]  H. Dillon Pyoderma and nephritis. , 1967, Annual review of medicine.

[8]  A. Dubin,et al.  Subclinical renal response to streptococcal infection. , 1966, The New England journal of medicine.

[9]  P. Vassalli,et al.  An immunofluorescent study of pathogenic mechanisms in glomerular diseases. , 1966, The New England journal of medicine.

[10]  Mardiney Mr,et al.  Immunology and morphology of acute post-streptococcal glomerulonephritis. , 1966 .

[11]  J. Zabriskie,et al.  STUDIES ON THE PATHOGENESIS OF ACUTE AND PROGRESSIVE GLOMERULONEPHRITIS IN MAN BY IMMUNOFLUORESCEIN AND IMMUNOFERRITIN TECHNIQUES. , 1965, Federation proceedings.

[12]  C. West,et al.  SERUM LEVELS OF BETA-1C GLOBULIN, A COMPLEMENT COMPONENT, IN THE NEPHRITIDES, LIPOID NEPHROSIS, AND OTHER CONDITIONS. , 1964, The Journal of clinical investigation.

[13]  R. Rifkind,et al.  ELECTRON MICROSCOPIC STUDIES OF EXPERIMENTAL NEPHRITIS WITH FERRITIN-CONJUGATED ANTIBODY : THE BASEMENT MEMBRANES AND CISTERNAE OF VISCERAL EITHELIAL CELLS IN NEPHRITIC RAT GLOMERULI , 1962 .

[14]  E. Updyke,et al.  Provisional new type of group A streptococci associated with nephritis. , 1955, Science.

[15]  H. Kleinman Epidemic acute glomerulonephritis at Red Lake. , 1954, Minnesota medicine.

[16]  R. S. Weaver,et al.  Significance of the epidemiological differences between acute nephritis and acute rheumatic fever. , 1952, Transactions of the Association of American Physicians.

[17]  R. Lancefield,et al.  TYPING GROUP A HEMOLYTIC STREPTOCOCCI BY M PRECIPITIN REACTIONS IN CAPILLARY PIPETTES , 1943, The Journal of experimental medicine.

[18]  By,et al.  Cases and Observations, Illustrative of Renal Disease, Accompanied with the Secretion of Albuminous Urine , 1839, The British and foreign medical review.

[19]  De Waal,et al.  ACUTE GLOMERULONEPHRITIS . THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THE VARIATIONS IN THE INCIDENCE OF THE DISEASE , 2022 .