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During the congress, E-Posters will be accessible to all participants on the congress website 24/7, as well as in the E-poster stations in the congress center.
Preparing your E-Poster
Please review the E-Poster format requirements carefully when preparing your E-Poster. Should your E-Poster not meet the mentioned requirements, it may not be displayed as described above.
E-Poster Submission Deadline
Please prepare and upload your E-Poster no later than March 14, 2026 11.59PM CET. After this date, you will no longer be able to prepare and upload your E-poster and it will not be displayed and accessible on the congress website.
Please follow the instructions below to input your abstract title.
Abstract titles should be brief and reflect the content of the abstract.
Glomerulonephritis, histopathologically, consists of several types, with the clinical sign being nephrotic syndrome (NS) which is based on the presence of proteinuria. Glomerular damage is described in different degrees by histopathological type. The degree of glomerular damage can be assessed by a glomerular score index (GI).
Study was evaluated biopsy data of subjects with clinical symptoms NS period January 2014 - May 2020 at Hasanuddin University Hospital. Histopathological examinated using light microscopy. Glomerular severity was assessed by GI which assessed disease activity (presence or absence of hypersellularity), disease severity (presence or absence of crescent) and distribution (focal / diffuse) with a range of GI scores between 0 - 8.
From a study of 49 SN subjects the most subject was male 27 (55.1%) and the most histopathological minimal lesion glomerulonephritis (MLGN) were 26 (53.1%) followed by focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) 10 (20.4%), membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (MPGN) 7 (14.4%) and membranous glomerulonephritis (MGN) 6 (12.1%) subjects. Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis had the largest IG score and was significantly different fromother histopathologic types (LMGN, FSGS and GNM) (p = 0.02). Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis had a higher mean proteinuria excretion and was significantly different than other histopathological types (LMGN, MGN and MPGN) (p = 0.02). IG score was not significantly associated with proteinuria (p> 0.05).
Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis has a significantly higher GI score than the other types (MLGN, FSGS and MGN) but both MPGN type and high GI scores are not correlated with the amount of proteinuria. Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis has a significantly higher amount of proteinuria than the other types (MLGN, MGN and MPGN).