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Healed Renal Infarct
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Healed Renal Infarct

The photomicrograph shows an infarct that has undergone fibrous scarring.
Note the depression of the cortical surface below the level of the adjacent normal cortex.
This trichrome stains shows a blue color to the lesion, indicating excess collagen.
(Description By:H. Yamase, M.D. )
(Image Contrib. by: UCHC )
Renal Infarct
Etiology

Most renal infarcts are the result of embolized thrombi that lodge in renal arterial vessels.
Pathogenesis

Vascular occlusion by embolized thrombi causes infarctive, coagulative type necrosis.,
Epidemiology

The epidemiology is that of the primary disease process affecting the heart, i.e, atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, infectious endocarditis.
General Gross Description

On cut section, renal infarcts are triangular with the base at the cortical surface and the apex pointing towards the medulla and the occluded artery.
A day or so after occlusion, the infarct appears pale compared to adjacent parenchyma.
Old resolved infarcts on cut section show a V shape absence of renal parenchyma.
General Microscopic Description

Recent infarcts show coagulative necrosis where the native renal architecture is discernible but the tissue is necrotic.
Heal by scarring.
Clinical Correlation

Since many cases are caused by thrombi that form in the left heart, the clinical picture may be dominanted by the cardiac problems.
Flank pain may be present and a direct reflection of the renal infarct.
References

Cotran RS, Kumar V, Robbins SL: Robbins Pathologic Basis of Disease. 5th ed. Philadelphia, W.B. Saunders, 1994, pp. 982.
Renal Infarct
Synopsis by: Harold Yamase M.D. (T71000M54700)[183]
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