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American Journal of Kidney Diseases | 1993

Mesangial Proliferative Glomerulonephritis in Southwestern American Indians

Wendy E. Hoy; Michael D. Hughson; Sm Smith; Dm Megill

A series of 166 American Indian renal biopsy specimens from 1971 to 1989 showed a very high proportion with mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis with mesangial immunoglobulin deposition (Ig-pos mesGN). This disease comprised 68.7% of all the biopsies and 83.8% of all primary GN, proportions much greater than those (23.5% and 37.7%, respectively) of a local contemporaneous biopsy series from non-Indians ( P


American Journal of Kidney Diseases | 1996

Urinary findings and renal function in adult Navajo Indians and associations with type 2 diabetes

Wendy E. Hoy; Sally Jim; Wayne Warrington; Amy Light; Dm Megill

We screened a sample of adult Navajo Indians for signs of renal disease that might underlie their increasing rates of renal failure. Nondiabetics had modest rates of hypertension, which was more common in males and increased with age. Microscopic hematuria was very common, and only a fraction was associated with progressive nephropathy. Microalbuminuria, mostly undetected by routine dipstick, was present in 14.6% of subjects; overt albuminuria was present in 2%. Increasing albuminuria was related to renal insufficiency, which was more common in males. Hypertension was associated with greater then threefold increases in both albuminuria and renal insufficiency. Cardiovascular disease was uncommon and had no discernible relationship to albuminuria. Most diabetic patients (58.4%) had hypertension, with equal rates for males and females. Fully half of all diabetic patients had unsatisfactory blood pressure levels at screening. Rates and patterns of hematuria were like those of nondiabetics. Microalbuminuria was present in 36.1% and overt albuminuria in 17.9%, four and eight times the rates in matched nondiabetics, respectively; these differences persisted after controlling for blood pressure. Renal insufficiency was associated with progressive albuminuria and was present in 10.6%, with equal rates in males and females. Hypertension, albuminuria, and renal insufficiency, but not hematuria, increased with increasing diabetes duration. Hypertension was associated with a twofold increase in albuminuria, a threefold increase in overt albuminuria, and an eightfold increase in renal insufficiency. Cardiovascular disease had no detectable association with microalbuminuria, but had a strong relationship to overt albuminuria. The high rates of hematuria are not well explained. It probably has nonrenal as well as renal origins, the latter including mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis. The impressive rates of albuminuria among diabetic patients mark a large reservoir of renal disease and fore-shadow even larger burdens of end-stage renal disease and cardiovascular disease in the near future. Improved detection and treatment of hypertension is needed to slow the progression of renal disease in nondiabetics and diabetics, together with screening and treatment protocols for albuminuric diabetic patients. Prevention of albuminuria probably involves population-based modification of blood pressure and metabolic profiles.


American Journal of Kidney Diseases | 1987

Epidemic Renal Disease of Unknown Etiology in the Zuni Indians

Wendy E. Hoy; Dm Megill; Michael D. Hughson


Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine | 1989

Mesangiopathic Glomerulonephritis in Zuni (new-Mexico) Indians

Hughson; Dm Megill; Sm Smith; Tung Ks; Miller G; Wendy E. Hoy


Public Health Reports | 1995

Cardiovascular disease in Navajo Indians with type 2 diabetes

Wendy E. Hoy; Amy Light; Dm Megill


International Samuel L. Kountz symposium. 2 | 1989

End-Stage Renal-Disease in Southwestern Native Americans, with Special Focus On the Zuni and Navajo Indians

Wendy E. Hoy; Dm Megill


International Samuel L. Kountz symposium. 2 | 1989

Mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis in Southwestern American Indians

Wendy E. Hoy; Sm Smith; Hughson; Dm Megill


International Samuel L. Kountz symposium. 2 | 1989

Risk factors for renal disease in a native american community

Dm Megill; Wendy E. Hoy


Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine | 1989

Pathologic findings in mesangiopathic glomerulonephritis in Navajo Indians

Sm Smith; Wendy E. Hoy; Dorothy Pathak; Dm Megill; Tung Ks; Hughson


Western Journal of Medicine | 1988

Rates and Causes of End-Stage Renal Disease in Navajo Indians, 1971-1985

Dm Megill; Wendy E. Hoy; Sandra Dale Woodruff

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Wendy E. Hoy

University of Queensland

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Sm Smith

University of New Mexico

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Hughson

University of New Mexico

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Michael D. Hughson

University of Mississippi Medical Center

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Tung Ks

University of New Mexico

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Dorothy Pathak

Michigan State University

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