Balkan nephropathy: a disorder of renal embryogenesis?
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抽象
There is evidence to suggest that a renal embryogenesis disorder, with an associated deficit of nephrons, may be the cause of nephropathy later in the lives of patients with Balkan endemic nephropathy (BEN). This evidence includes the renal dysplasia or hypoplasia observed in BEN patients, the high incidence of renal pelvic and renal artery aberrations, primitive glomeruli and obstructed tubules on kidney biopsy, and an adult Fanconi-type syndrome of generalized proximal tubular dysfunction with hyperchloremic acidosis, potassium wasting, preserved urinary acidification, tubular proteinuria, aminoaciduria, uricosuria, hypomagnesemia, sodium wasting and normotension, as well as evidence from epidemiological data. The disease has affected no more than 2 generations, most of whom were in their 50s during 1965-1970, when maximal numbers of patients were seen. We are now observing a decreasing prevalence of BEN in Bulgaria and, even though this may have resulted from some prophylactic measures, the disease disappears much as it had appeared, as an epidemic. We speculate that some environmental factor may have had an impact on embryogenesis and resulted in nephropathy in patients with BEN. This could have been famine during the devastating Balkan wars in the beginning of 20th century, but may also have been an infectious or environmental factor, limited to the affected areas around the Danube river, which acted only during a limited period of time.