Renal Histo-Pathological Changes On Autopsy In Pregnancy Related Deaths
Pratima Khare*, Renu Gupta, RajaniAnand, Avni Bhatnagar, Zini Chaurasia
Pathology, Dr Baba Saheb Ambedkar (BSA) Medical College and Hospital, New Delhi, India.
*Corresponding Author
Dr. Pratima Khare,
Pathology, Dr Baba Saheb Ambedkar (BSA) Medical College and Hospital, New Delhi, India.
Tel: (+91) 9910519819
E-mail: drpratimakhare@gmail.com
Received: July 05, 2021; Accepted: September 30, 2021; Published: October 04, 2021
Citation: Pratima Khare, Renu Gupta, RajaniAnand, Avni Bhatnagar, Zini Chaurasia. Renal Histo-Pathological Changes On Autopsy In Pregnancy Related Deaths. Int J Forensic Sci Pathol. 2021;8(4):459-463. doi: dx.doi.org/10.19070/2332-287X-2100096
Copyright: Dr. Pratima Khare©2021. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Abstract
Introduction: Medico-legal autopsies confirm the immediate cause of death and final diagnosis. These also provide additional
information about the state of various vital organs of the body and existing co-morbidities that could have affected
the outcome of the patients. Not much data is available on incidence of Biopsy/ autopsy proven cases of renal pathology in
pregnant/ pregnancy related deaths.
Aims: The study aimed at finding out prevalence and pattern of various types of renal pathologies and their co-relation with
various pregnancy related causes leading to death where autopsies were performed.
Material & Methods:The study consisted of eleven cases of autopsies conducted on cases of deaths of pregnant ladies who
died having medicolegal problems or alleged medicolegal negligence. The kidney tissue specimens were fixed in 10%formal
saline for 48-72 hours before processing. H&E stains and PAS stain were performed on sections from paraffin blocks.
Results: The study demonstrated renal changes in a very high percentage of cases, which were mostly related to the ongoing
pre-existing disease processescontributing towards cause of death. Conditions like eclampsia were associated with hydropic
changes in kidney. Similarly, deaths due to hemorrhagic shock were associated with acute tubular necrosis/ hydropic changes
in the kidney. Non- gestational causes of death like disseminated tuberculosis was also associated with renal tuberculosis.
Conclusions: The Physicianmust be aware of the high prevalence and wide spectrum of possible pathologies in the kidney
related to various obstetrical complications. The focus should be to develop more efficacious diagnostic methods for timely
intervention.
2.Keywords
3.Introduction
4.Methodology
5.Case Report
6.Discussion
7.Conclusion
8.References
Keywords
Autopsy; Maternal Deaths; Renal Pathology; Eclampsia; Acute Tubular Necrosis (ATN).
Introduction
Medico-legal autopsies and clinical autopsies, beside confirming
the immediate cause of death and making final diagnosis, also
provide additional information about complications of intensive
care and information about existing co-morbidities that could
have affected the outcome of the patient. Thus, an autopsy also
serves as important tool for retrospective quality assessment of
the clinical diagnosis and is educational tool to the clinician [1].
Not much data is available on incidence of Biopsy/autopsy proven
cases of renal pathology in pregnant/pregnancy related deaths.
In practice, renal biopsies are rarely performed serially and practically
never on control obstetric patients without proteinuria or
hypertension, or on those with symptoms suggesting imminent
eclampsia. Furthermore, because specimens are small, and lesions
may involve only a few glomeruli, they may be missed. Last, in
some instances, the technique may lead to crush or traction artefacts
[2]. Chandrakar S.et.al. intheir post mortem study on maternal
deaths observed renal pathology in 25.3% of autopsies, which
contributed to a significant number of maternal mortalities and
morbidities [3]. In autopsy, the kidneys are examined for disease,
injury and other related changes suggesting cause of death or the
incidental findings in many situations. Since kidney biopsy is usually
avoided in critically ill patients, postmortem histologic evaluation
of kidneys may be the first and only opportunity to identify
these diseases [4].
Material and Methods
The present retrospective study was conducted in the department
of pathology at our institute. It included all the post-mortem cases of deaths related to pregnancy with legalissues including
cases of medical neglect, since Oct. 2013 to May 2021. In view
of the medicolegal nature and legal bonding as per law of the
land, no ethical clearance for carrying out the autopsy was required.
During the said period 11 autopsies of pregnant ladies
were carried out which consisted of those who died having medicolegal
problems or alleged medicolegal negligence. The autopsy
time varied from one day to two days depending upon receiving
of dead body in the autopsy surgical theatre. The kidney tissue
specimens were fixed in 10%formal saline for 48-72 hours before
processing. H&E stains were performed on sections from paraffin
blocks in all cases.
The clinical data included patient’s age, antenatal history wherever
available, clinical presentation in cases of the institutional deaths,
contributing cause of death, probable time interval between death
and post-mortem, and state of important organs like lung and liver,
besides kidney at the time of post-mortem. The tissue/ whole
organ sample were received in 10% formal saline. Sections were
taken for further processing and histo-pathological examination
of the renal tissue. The staining agent used in most cases was
H&E. PAS stain was used wherever required.
Results
There were five cases of direct “Gestational death” (3 cases of eclampsia,
1 case of ruptured tubal ectopic pregnancy, 1 case of illegal
medical termination of pregnancy (MTP) with ruptured uterus,
bleeding and shock. [Table]. There were 3 cases of “indirect
gestational deaths” (1 case of home delivery with post-partum
hemorrhage (PPH), one case of post lower segment caesarean
section (LSCS) with Pulmonary embolism and 1 case of acute
abdomen at 7 months of gestation. There was 3 case of “nongestational
death” (one case of death due to TB in 8 months
pregnant lady and 2 cases of 8 months pregnant females dying
under mysterious circumstances where no obstetrical cause could
be ascertained). The series had 9 (81.8%) cases in the 3rd trimester
of pregnancy, whereas 1 each in 1st and 2nd trimester. At
least 8 cases (72.72%) cases were attributed to direct andindirect
gestational causes. There were 7 (63.33%) cases of institutional
death whereas 4 cases (36.36%) were those which were brought
dead to the hospital.
Focal hydropic changes in the tubules were seen in 5 cases [Fig 1].
Etiology among them were ruptured ectopic tubal pregnancy in
one case, eclampsia in three cases and one case where LSCS was
performed for eclampsia with intra uterine death(IUD) of fetus.
There were 3 cases of acute tubular necrosis [Fig 2]. Two of these
were attributed to PPH (One case death due to PPH following
home delivery of a still born baby) and the second case of death
(due to Post MTP ruptured uterus associated with hemorrhagic
shock). One case of ATN was seen in a case where the primary
cause of death was eclampsia.
There was 1 case of renal tuberculosis in an eight months pregnant
lady suffering from disseminated tuberculosis [Fig 3]. The
renal pathology showed one case of partial to complete glomerulo-
sclerosis with basement membrane thickening in a case [Fig 4]
where the primary cause of death was attributed to Post-partum
pulmonary embolism post LSCS surgery. In 1 case of death of
7 months pregnant lady due to acute abdominal, no remarkable
change was detected on histopathological examination of kidney.
Discussion
Pregnancy-related death is defined by the International Classification
of Diseases, Tenth Revision (ICD-10) as the death of a woman
while pregnant or within 42 days of termination of pregnancy,
irrespective of the cause of death [5]. The incidence of autopsy,
being carried out after maternal deaths during perinatal period
from pregnancy-related or other causes, remains an uncommon
event in routine forensic autopsy practices. We had 11 such cases
since the inception of autopsy services at our institute from Oct,
2013 till May, 2021.
The common causes of maternal death vary somewhat from
region to region and include pulmonary thromboembolism, amniotic
fluid embolism, primary postpartum uterine hemorrhage,
infection, and complications of hypertension including preeclampsia
and eclampsia. Pulmonary disease, complications of
anesthesia, and cardiomyopathy also are significant contributors
to maternal mortality in some populations [5]. Buschmann, C.
et al.[4] reviewed medico-legal records in Berlin, from 2005 to
2010 for all female deaths due to maternal and pregnancy-related
causes, including deaths of pregnant women from non-natural
causes. Fatalities were classified as “direct gestational death,” “indirect
gestational death” or “non-gestational death.” There were
total 13 female fatalities. Eight (61.5 %) women died in-hospital,
four (30.8 %) at home, and one woman died in public. Their series
had three cases were of “non-gestational deaths,” six cases of
“direct gestational deaths,” and two cases of “indirect gestational
deaths.” The cause in one of their case remained unclear after autopsy and additional examinations. The case of deathin another
one case seemed to be directly related to previous gestation. Our
series of 11 cases also had the similar pattern with 5 (45.45%)
cases of direct gestational deaths and 3 cases (27.27%) cases of
indirect gestational deaths. Among the 3 cases of non-gestational
death,1 (9.09%) died of disseminated tuberculosis whereas in 2
cases of crime, death was not related to gestation. Similar to the
series of Buschmann [4], our series also had 63.63% of the cases
of institutional deaths. However, Chandrakar S et.al. [3] in their
study of 42 autopsies in pregnant females reported having 10
(23.8%) patients presenting in the second trimester; 14 (33.3%)
in the third trimester; and 18 (42.8%) in the postpartum period.
We had only 2 cases in 1st and 2nd trimester whereas rests of the
cases (81.8%) were in 3rd trimester. Their series had 37 patients
(88%) who died due to indirect causes of maternal mortality (predominantly
infections), and 5 patients (12%) died due to direct
causes of maternal death (e.g. placenta abruption, pregnancyinduced
hypertension, ruptured ectopic pregnancy). Our figures
could not be compared with their series apparently because of the
different parameters used for making the sub groups.
On microscopy, Chandrakar et al [3] reported that kidney showed
evidence of Acute tubular necrosis 22 cases, Acute pyelonephritis
7 cases, Disseminated intravascular coagulation 7 cases, Diabetic
nephropathy 3 cases, Sickle cell nephropathy 1 case, Thrombotic
microangiopathy 1 case and Tuberculosis of kidney 1 case. However,
in their series no attempt was made to co-relatehisto-pathological
findings with cause of death.
In our series of 11 autopsies in pregnant ladies,5 cases had focal
hydropic changes in the tubules [Fig1] in the kidney. This included
2 cases dying of eclampsia, one case dying due to ruptured
ectopic tubal pregnancy with secondary shock and 2 cases
of 8 months pregnantlady dying under mysterious circumstances.
One of those two homicidal deaths, one had additional congestive
changes in the renal tissue signifying hypoxic injury.Hydropic
change refers to accumulation of water in the cells and is one
of the early signs of cellular degeneration in response to injury.
In tubules it is due to accumulation of water in the tubular cells
usually due to hypoxia of tissues with resultant decrease in aerobic
respiration in mitochondria and decrease production of ATP.
Presence of hydropic changes in renal tubules in cases of toxemia
pregnancy was also reported by Sheehan [2]. They believed that
the characteristic changes in toxemia are the thickening of the
epithelium due to a massive increase of the cytoplasm (Hydropic
changes). Richard [6] in his classic study in 1967 on casualties
of Korean War found renal changes in 33% cases. They demonstrated
a close clinical association of a major hypotensive episode
with the subsequent development of renal injury and failure. The
study demonstrated that the condition leading to shock may also
lead to hydropic changes in the kidney.In our series , the case
with shock after ruptured ectopic tubal pregnancy had hydropic
changes in the renal tissue,pointing towards the hypotensive episodes
(Shock) being the etiological factor for those changes. Both
the suicide/homicide deaths in our series had hydropic changes in
the renal tissue suggestive of hypoxic injury being responsible for
those changes. Congestive changes present in one of these two
suicide/ homicide case are a common feature found in kidney as
well as many other vital organs as reported by many authors [7].
Three cases in our series had features of acute tubular necrosis
[Fig 2]. The hypovolemic/hemorrhagic shock leading to ATN is
an established cause of ATN. Among those 3cases with ATN in
our series, one case died of PPH , one due to hemorrhagic shock
following MTP with ruptured uterus bleeding and shock, one case
where death was a complication of eclampsia.Chandrakar et.al [3]
also observed that obstetric complications, such as abruptioplacentae,
septic abortion, eclampsia, postpartum hemorrhage, and
puerperal sepsis, are themost common causes of renal cortical necrosis
(50%-70%). Many authors have reported ATN in eclampsia.
Pollak [8] says that an intense vasospasm is characteristic of
preeclampsia and eclampsia and could be a contributing factor for
renal changes. However, Sheehan [2] believed that there were never
any ischemic lesions in the kidney in uncomplicated toxemia
and histologic evidence of an extremely focal arrest of circulation
is rare and can be found in a few cases of eclampsia or toxemic
crisis. We had histopathological evidence of these changes,one
case dying of complication of eclampsia, suggestive of toxemic
crisis playing a role in the deaths.
There was one case of Post LSCS death in our series. It was a case
of un- booked pregnancy and no anti natal records were available.
The surgery was done for fetal distress. The primary cause
of death of the mother was pulmonary embolism. The renal tissue
on autopsy showed features of hyper-cellular glomeruli, diffuse
nodular sclerosis and basement membrane thickening [Fig
4]. Sheehan [2] in his study of renal morphology in preeclampsia
reported glomerular size increases in the eclampsia group. In
posteclampsia, there may be a further increase in size, but their
data are insufficient for valid calculations.The number of glomeruli
involved is very variable from a few to severalglomeruli in a
section. The glomerular lesion is common in severe toxemia and
eclampsia but is not absolutely pathognomonic. The basement
membrane which is normally about 0.3 cm in thickness may be
more thickened. It is commonly accepted that one of the typical
changes in toxemia is a hypertrophy ofthe media of afferent
arterioles. This is not in accord with observations by Sheehan [2].
About 20% of patients with fatal eclampsia have acute intravascular
hemolysis. Jonathan et.al.[9] described lesions from autopsies
of women who died of eclampsia, showed presence of glomerular
endotheliosis. Pathological changes in cases of eclampsia include
widespread endothelial/vascular injury in vulnerable organ
beds.
Chunhong Huang and Shanying Chen reported 0.81% incidence
rate of AKI (acute kidney injury) during pregnancy and puerperium
[10]. Their series hadthree hundred and forty-three cases of
AKI during pregnancy and puerperium included 21 severe AKI
cases and 21 cases with acute-on-CKD (Chronic kidney disease).
Pre-eclampsia/eclampsia, and postpartum hemorrhage were the
most frequent causes of AKI during pregnancy and puerperium.
Our observations based on histopathological evidence of renal
injuries in deaths associated with eclampsia, PPH (Post partem
hemorrhage) and shock are similar to the observations of Chunhong
et.al [10].
Many authors believe that incidence of acute renal failures are
rare in modern times due to improved medical care, decrease in
the number of septic abortions, effective care of obstetrical complications,
and legalization of abortion [11, 12]. Still the risk remains
in illegal abortions and unsupervised home deliveries. AKI
during pregnancy and puerperium is not as rare as we thought.
Amniotic fluid embolism and postpartum hemorrhage are the
leading causes of maternal mortality. Severe AKI may predict poor outcome.In our series, one case of post LSCS death was
proved having died of pulmonary embolism.
Many authors believe that pulmonary and extra-pulmonary TB
affects a pregnant lady in the same way as it affects non- pregnant
lady. Depending upon various factors such as site and extent
of disease, stage of pregnancy, nutritional status, presence
of concomitant diseases, the immune status and co-existence of
HIV infection, the prognosis may vary [13-15]. There was only
1 case of renal tuberculosis[ Fig 3] in an eight months pregnant
lady suffering from disseminated tuberculosis in the series. Renal
tuberculosis has been reported to the extent of 27% in cases of
disseminated tuberculosis [16] and is often missed clinically by
treating physician. Both treating physician and forensic pathologist
must be aware of the possibility.
Among the two cases where autopsy was carried out on suspicion
of suicide/homicide, in one case of hydropic degeneration
in tubules and congestion was detected whereas in the other case
only signs of hydropic degeneration were present. The congestive
changes is a very common phenomenon seen in various body
organs in cases of suicide/homicide due to strangulation as has
been reported by many authors [7].
Conclusion
In summary, the study demonstrated that renal changes are very
common on autopsies performed on pregnant patients. These
changes are mostly related to the ongoing disease process contributing
towards causes responsible for the death whether due to
gestational or post gestational causes. The treating gynecologist
must be aware of possibilities of renal complications of diseases
associated with pregnancy. Non- gestational causes are usually
associated with serious systemic diseases like disseminated tuberculosis
or homicidal/suicidal reasons. The pathologist must have
a broad knowledge of the physiological and biochemical changes
that occur during pregnancy, as well as the clinical and pathological
manifestation of these changes. In addition, it should be kept
in mind that deaths during pregnancy may be due to unnatural
causes. Accident, homicide, and suicide must be ruled out in each
case.
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