The histological picture of primary glomerulonephritis with glomerular IgA deposition (IgA nephropathy and Henoch-Schönlein disease) can vary from minimal mesangial involvement to severe endocapillary and/or extracapillary proliferation. Local activation of the complement cascade by glomerular IgA deposits and release of anaphylactoid factor are considered to be major triggers of inflammation, but clear-cut correlations between the severity of the histological findings and the intensity of glomerular deposition of immunoglobulin and complement fractions are still lacking. The purpose of this study was to investigate the spatial distribution of IgA and complement in mesangial deposits with confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) and to correlate specific patterns of IgA-complement interaction with glomerular damage. Two groups of patients have been studied, one with mild to moderate diffuse mesangial proliferation and the other with diffuse proliferative endocapillary and/or extracapillary patterns. In milder forms of the disease, the majority of the immune deposits are composed of both IgA and C3, coated by an outer layer of IgA alone. Large C3 deposits, or deposits composed of IgA and C3 without an outer coat of IgA, were associated with more severe histological lesions. The results suggest that free access of active complement components to cell and/or mesangial matrix receptors could trigger a cytolytic reaction and that immunoglobulins seem to act as a protective layer on C3 components.