Schwartz M M, Roberts J L
Clin Immunol Immunopathol. 1983 Dec;29(3):369-80. doi: 10.1016/0090-1229(83)90040-5.
Two patterns of immune aggregate localization were demonstrated by immunofluorescence and electron microscopy in the choroid plexus of four young women with fatal systemic lupus erythematosus. The two patients with granular immune aggregates localized to the basement membrane of the choroid epithelium (membranous choroidopathy) had subepithelial and intramembranous electron-dense deposits and membranous glomerulopathy in their kidneys. The two patients with immune aggregates in the walls of choroidal blood vessels (vascular choroidopathy) had subendothelial electron-dense deposits and proliferative glomerulonephritis. Vascular deposits in the choroid plexus were associated with capillary thrombi and extravasation of fibrinoid material, while isolated membranous choroidopathy had no histopathologic evidence of inflammation. The clinical presentation and serological studies of blood and cerebrospinal fluid were compared in an effort to discriminate between patients with membranous and vascular choroidopathy. All patients had variable neuropsychiatric symptoms and major motor seizures. While those with vascular choroidopathy had more evidence of disease activity in their sera, both groups demonstrated elevated titers of immune-complexed antinuclear antibodies in cerebrospinal fluid. Although both patterns of choroidal localization of immune aggregates were associated with neuropsychiatric dysfunction, we were unable to identify discrete clinical-symptom complexes which differentiated patients with membranous and vascular choroidopathy. These contrasting patterns of choroid plexus immunopathology suggest that factors responsible for differential localization of immune aggregates are not restricted to the renal glomerulus.