Abstract
Abstract Background and Aims Thrombotic Microangiopathies (TM) are three distinct clinical syndromes presenting the same histological renal pattern: typical and atypical Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome (SEU- aSEU) and Thrombotic Thrombocytopenic Purpura (TTP). So far, the first report of a TM has been generally attributed to Eli Moschowitz. In 1922 he described the case of a 16 years old girl who died after acute onset of fever with petechial lesions and autoptic findings of hyaline thrombosis of terminal arterioles and capillaries, thus profiling the first case of TTP. Only in the 1955, Conrad Gasser described the first medical record of HUS, describing the case of a patient with a manifestation of bilateral necrosis of the renal cortex. We describe the first reported case of a Thrombotic Microangiopathy, in particular an experimentally induced aHUS by Richard M. Pearce in 1909. In this case, the trigger leading to aHUS was represented by snake venom injection in an experimental rabbit model. Method Pearce described acute glomerular lesions produced in the rabbit using dried venom of rattlesnake Crotalus Adamanteus. It was dissolved in salt solution in the proportion of 0.25 of a milligram to one cubic centimeter, rising gradually to two milligrams, and then followed by doses of 0.5 of a milligram of fresh venom at various intervals. The intervals between injections depended on the general condition of the animal and the amount of albuminuria. Results Rabbit kidneys showed well marked hemorrhagic and exudative lesions in the glomeruli; hyaline, granular, blood, and hemoglobin casts in both convoluted and collecting tubules; and granular degeneration of the epithelium of the convoluted tubules and loops of Henle. Pearce also described a “penetration of the cells of the compressed glomerular tuft into the mass of hemorrhage lying either in the tuft itself or in the capsular space” (Figure 1). In animals surviving 20-30 days after the first injection of the venom, the acute lesions were demonstrated to subside at the microscopic examination and their earlier presence was marked by “occasional casts and compressed masses of red cells in the glomerular spaces and tufts”. At the same time other models also showed “extensive granular degeneration of the convoluted tubules and many casts”. The renal autoptic findings presented the features of a vascular nephritis with severe endothelial changes. Conclusion Glomerular and tubular lesions of rabbits’ kidneys induced by crotalus’s venom showed typical features of what is today defined as aHUS. In this first experiment, the author described a glomerular tuft as “more analogous to the organization of a red thrombus than it is to any form of glomerular lesion known in man”, so we can affirm that Pearce described, ante litteram TMA histological features many years before other scientists.
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