Patterns of glomerulonephritis in Zimbabwe: survey of disease characterised by nephrotic proteinuria.

Janet Seggie(University of Zimbabwe), Peter G Davies(University of Zimbabwe), Daniel Ninin(South African Institute for Medical Research), Joan Henry(University of Zimbabwe)
PubMed
January 1, 1984
Cited by 24

Abstract

Ninety-eight Zimbabweans with glomerulonephritis characterised by nephrotic proteinuria were studied. There was no evidence to implicate Schistosoma mansoni or S. haemotobium in the aetiology, although schistosomiasis was diagnosed in 54 patients in the series. Similarly, Plasmodium malariae proved unimportant as a cause of the nephrotic syndrome, only one patient showing focal segmental glomerulosclerosis which was associated with subclinical quartan malarial infection. Nevertheless, infections were shown to play a major role in the genesis of glomerulonephritis which was associated with beta-haemolytic streptococcal, hepatitis B and syphilitic infection in 45 patients in the series. The major patterns of disease in childhood proved to be membranous glomerulopathy associated with hepatitis B antigenaemia. In young adults post-streptococcal proliferative glomerulonephritis constituted the commonest disease pattern. In older adult patients a miscellany of primary and secondary glomerulonephritides was encountered but proliferative glomerulonephritis, which was both idiopathic and streptococcus-related, predominated.


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