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American Journal of Pathology, Vol 100, 39-56, Copyright © 1980 by American Society for Investigative Pathology
REGULAR ARTICLES |
HT Nguyen and JC Woodard
Female Sprague-Dawley rats weighing 45-55 g fed a purified diet for 18 days developed hydroxyapatite intratubular lithiasis, the earliest calcific lesions being detectable by light microscopy on Day 12. The kidneys from these rats revealed ultrastructural changes in proximal tubular cells prior to intraluminal microlith formation. These changes included evidence for increased intracellular calcium, accumulation of electron-dense cytoplasmic granules, and vesiculation and shedding of brush border microvilli within Segment I of the proximal tubule. It was concluded, on the basis of ultrastructural observation, that microvesicles were formed by the shedding of vesiculated microvilli and microvesicles initiated the formation of an intraluminal microurolith in Segment I of the proximal tubule. The initially formed microurolith grew, as it traveled down the nephron, to a size large enough to be visualized by light microscopy. When it reached Segment III (straight segment) of the proximal tubule, the microurolith reached a size so large that it became difficult for it to pass the loop of Henle.
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