Anderson-Fabry disease in kidneys from deceased donor.

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION(2007)

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摘要
Anderson-Fabry disease (AFD) is a rare, X-linked lysosomal storage disease that leads to progressive intracellular accumulation of globotriaosylceramide in visceral organs and the vascular endothelium. We report two patients with end-stage renal disease who received renal allograft from deceased female donor who died from heart failure. A 62-year-old women received a renal allograft in July 2006. Except for low-range proteinuria, renal function was normal until 6 months after transplantation when serum creatinine increased from 120 to 150 mu mol/L. A renal biopsy was performed. Based on the specific pathological finding, AFD in donor was suspected. In order to prove the diagnosis, the other recipient also underwent renal biopsy 3 months later. This was 45-year-old female with stable graft function and nonnephrotic proteinuria. Light microscopic findings included a 'foamy' appearance of affected cells with swelling and vacuolization of podocytes. Electron microscopic finding show mesangial cells and podocytes filled with dense lysosomal granules appearing as myelin figures and 'zebra bodies'. Changes were less intensive than in the biopsy of the first recipient. The donor was 54-year-old Italian women who died on the Adriatic coast after heart attack. This is the first case of AFD found in a kidney allograft from deceased donor.
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deceased donor organs,donor evaluation,donor risk,Fabry disease,graft biopsy,graft outcome
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