also called GLOMERULONEPHRITIS, OR NEPHRITIS, inflammation of
the structures in the kidney that produce urine: the glomeruli
and the nephrons. The glomeruli are small round clusters of capillaries
(microscopic blood vessels) that are surrounded by a double-walled capsule,
called Bowman's capsule. Bowman's capsule in turn connects with a long tubule.
The capsule and attached tubule are known as a nephron. In cases of
glomerulonephritis, the glomeruli, the nephrons, and the tissues between
nephrons are all afflicted. Glomerulonephritis may occur only once or may recur.
The successive stages of the disease are known as acute, subacute, and chronic.
In acute glomerulonephritis there are severe inflammation, renal
insufficiency, swelling, increased blood pressure (hypertension), and severe
back pain. Recovery is usually fairly complete after an episode of acute
glomerulonephritis, but minor infections may do further damage to the kidneys
and bring on the subacute and chronic stages. In the acute form of the disease,
the kidneys are swollen, the capsule covering each kidney is taut and stretched,
the surface is smooth and gray, and usually there are many small hemorrhages
from the capillaries. The whole complex of glomeruli and nephrons swells.
Subacute glomerulonephritis does not necessarily follow acute attacks; if it
does develop, however, it has usually been preceded by an acute episode several
months or years earlier. The kidney becomes considerably enlarged, the surface
is smooth and pale, and the internal tissue is darker than normal. The paleness
is due to the restriction of blood flow to the surface portion of the kidney and
the high accumulation of fat (lipid) droplets. Bowman's capsules become filled
with excess surface (epithelial) cells, red blood cells, and mineral crystals.
The nephron tubules begin to degenerate. Because of the breakdown of kidney
tissue, a greater amount of blood protein is lost into urine than should
normally be released. Red blood cells forced through the constricted glomeruli
become crushed, distorted, and fragmented; their loss leads to anemia.
Chronic glomerulonephritis usually follows the other two stages, if the affected person survives long enough, but it has been found in a few individuals who apparently have not had previous kidney disease. In this stage the kidney is reduced mostly to scar tissue. It is small and shrivelled, and the surface is granular. Because the blood cannot be filtered of waste products, abnormal quantities of nitrogenous substances in the blood cause the condition known as uremia. Treatment of all forms of glomerulonephritis is directed toward relief of the symptoms.
| b. Sept. 28, 1789, Bristol, Gloucestershire, Eng. d. Dec. 16, 1858, London |
Bright graduated in medicine from the University of Edinburgh in 1813. After working in hospitals on the Continent and in London, he became an assistant physician at Guy's Hospital, London, in 1820. He became a full physician there in 1824, and he retired from his post in 1843.
Bright excelled at making meticulous clinical observations and
correlating them with careful postmortem examinations. The results of his
wide-ranging researches first appeared in Reports of Medical Cases
(1827), in which he established edema (swelling) and proteinuria (the presence
of albumin in the urine) as the primary clinical symptoms of the serious kidney
disorder that bears his name. Bright's subsequent papers on renal disease
were published in a second volume of reports (1831) and in the first volume of Guy's
Hospital Reports of 1836.
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