Immunologic Aspects of Renal Disease

Abstract
IN discussing disease of the kidney with albuminous urine, Richard Bright1 was moved to remark, "... it may be fairly asserted that no other disease is more interesting in its history and origin, affords so many instances of the consent and dependence of the different functions upon each other, gives so much scope for pathological observations, or is so fertile in facts interesting to the cultivation of animal chemistry, as the disease of which we now speak." Despite the passage of the years, the increase in knowledge and understanding of "Bright's disease" and the growth of an enormous literature on . . .