Aquifer - Renal Flashcards
31
What is nephrotic syndrome?
Results when there is an increase in the permeability to negatively charged proteins of the glomerular filtration barrier in the kidney. This increased permeability leads to the four major characteristics used in diagnosing nephrotic syndrome.
4 characteristics of nephrotic syndrome?
- Nephrotic range proteinuria
- Hypoalbuminemia
- Edema
- Hyperlipidemia
Describe the pathophysiology of nephrotic syndrome.
Increased protein permeability of the glomerular filtration barrier leads to a loss of protein in the urine (proteinuria), including alubmin (hypoalbuminemia)
Decreased serum oncotic pressure from hypoalbuminemia results in interstitial fluid accumulation and resultant edema
Upregulation of albumin and other circulating proteins -> increased synthetic function of the liver resulting in hyperlipidemia
Age/sex of nephrotic syndrome in children?
Can affect children of any age, from infancy to adolescent
More common in pre-school and school age children
M>F (2:1), but this fails to persist in adolescence
Most common cause of primary nephrotic syndrome in children?
Minimal change disease (90% of cases under age 10)
Characteristic histologic finding in minimal change disease?
Diffuse effacement of the epithelial cell foot processes on EM with otherwise normal findings (normal on light microscopy)
Clinical findings of nephrotic syndrome?
Edema (most prominent symptom)
Periorbital edema that improves when the child is upright (gravity dependent edema)
Pitting edema, ascites, weight gain
Nonspecific symptoms of increased tiredness and decreased appetite due to interstitial fluid accumulation
Nephrotic range protein:creatinine ratio?
> 2.0 mg protein/mg creatinine
Evaluation of generalized edema?
- Electrolytes, BUN, creatinine (indication of renal function)
- AST, ALT, cholesterol, albumin, triglycerides (hepatic inflammation/impaired hepatic synthetic function)
- C3 and C4 complement levels (associated with several GN - membranoproliferative, post-strep, SLE)
- Streptozyme - antibodies to strep antigens, + in the setting of PSGN
Pathogenesis of proteinuria in nephrotic syndrome?
Increased filtration of moderately sized proteins (predominantly albumin and IgG) through the glomerular capillary wall, resulting in proteinuria
Specifically, this is caused by loss of the polyanion charge characteristic of the normal glomerular capillary wall. Normally, all layers of the glomerular filtration surface have a negative surface charge due to proteoglycans such as heparin sulfate. Loss or reduction of this charge may permit moderately sized negatively charged proteins like albumin to leak through the membrane.
Rx of primary nephrotic syndrome?
Children between 1-10 years without signs of nephritis (gross hematuria, HTN, elevatd Cr) may receive an empiric trial of corticsteroids (2 mg/kg/day of prednisone or prednisolone)
Treat for at least 12 weeks (6 full dose, 6 week taper); shorter courses associated with increased relapse risk
Sodium restriction to 1500-2000 mg/day
Combined IV furosemide and albumin (25%) - only for children with symptomatic edema (dyspnea, scrotal edema, etc.)
Why is IV furosemide not recommended in primary nephrotic syndrome?
Circulating volume is already low because of hypoalbuminemia, so furosemide without concurrent albumin administration may lead to dangerously low volume states and an increased risk for venous thrombosis
Why is albumin treatment alone not recommended?
May lead to redistribution of the interstitial fluid volume, which may cause CHF and pulmonary edema if it expands too rapidly
Types of response to steroids?
- Steroid responsive
- Relapsing/steroid-dependent (long-term prognosis is excellent, no long-term damage)
- Steroid-resistant
Define steroid-resistant primary nephrotic syndrome and next steps.
Those who do not respond to steroids with elimination of proteinuria after 8 weeks of therapy
Renal biopsy