Glomerulonephritis Proliferative Intracapillary Focal

Proliferative glomerulonephritis is a disease that occurs with inflammatory damage to the glomerular capillaries, resulting in an increased number and size of protein bodies (glomerulocytes) in the convoluted tubules. Glomerular fibrillation or glomerulus is a set of serious kidney pathologies that cause primary changes in renal tissue. Due to such changes, various clinical manifestations develop.

Focal glomerulonephritis occurs in people with bleeding disorders, as well as insufficiency of the cardiovascular system. This is one of the most severe diseases, as it affects capillary-type vessels. Capillaries are many small vessels that connect into larger vessels and then they merge into even larger ones. When the disease occurs, inflammation occurs in small capillaries, which subsequently leads to dysfunction of protein formation in the kidneys and poor functioning of other organs



Glomerulopathy is a large group of diseases that cause damage to the glomeruli in the kidneys. They can be caused by various factors (infections, allergies, medications), and manifest themselves with symptoms such as chronic fatigue, low blood pressure, edema, weight gain, increased protein in the urine, anemia and others.

One of the types of glomerulopathies is proli