glomerular disease Flashcards

1
Q

What is the cutoff between nephrotic and nephritic syndromes in terms of proteinuria?

A

-nephritic has less than 3.5 g of protein per day in 24 hr urine collection

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2
Q

What are the key labs/associations for nephrotic syndrome?

A
  • > 3.5 g/ day of protein in 24 hr urine collection
  • low albumen
  • hyperlipidemia
  • high risk of infection (lost immunoglobulins)
  • increased risk of thromboembolism due to loss of ATIII
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3
Q

What disease is similar to IgA nephropathy? What are key lab findings?

A

henoch schonlein purpura is similar. find increased serum IgA and mesangial cell proliferation

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4
Q

What is the treatment for IgA nephropathy?

A

ACE-I and statins for persistent proteinuria; consider steroids if nephrotic syndrome appears

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5
Q

What is the clinical presentation of goodpasture’s syndrome?

A

dyspnea, hemoptysis, myalgias, hematuria with IgG abs on against the glomerular and alveolar basement membranes

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6
Q

What is alport syndrome? Findings under microscope?

A
  • X-linked disease with associated high frequency hearing loss (and cataracts)
  • due to a mutation in type IV collagen in the basement membrane
  • Split basement membrane on EM
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7
Q

What are the three categories of rapidily progressive glomerulonephritis?

A
  1. anti-GBM (aka Goodpastures)
  2. immune complex deposition disease
  3. Pauci-immune- ANCA positive diseases like granulomatosis with polyangitis, churg-struass, mycroscopic polyangitis
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8
Q

What renal diseases are associated with low complement?

A

SLE, post strep glomerulonephritis, cryoglobulinemia, membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis, endocarditis

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9
Q

What is the most common cause of nephrotic syndrome in adults in the US? What conditions is it associated with?

A

FSGS
associateud with HIV and drug use, sickle cell- but often idiopathic
also most common in Af. americans and hispanics

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10
Q

When are ACE-Is and statins helpful in glomerular disease?

A

-reduce proteinuria. listed for lupus nephritis, alport syndrome, IgA nephropathy, membranous glomerulonephritis
ACE-I obviously also helpful for diabetic nephropathy

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11
Q

What is membranous nephropathy and what are associated conditions?

A

nephrotic, associated with hepatitis B and C, tumors, SLE, NSAIDs/penicillamine. this is due to immune complex deposition in the subepithelial space (“spike and dome” appearance)

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12
Q

What is membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis?

A
  • also due to immune complex deposition
  • 2 types
  • subendothelial- associated with Hep B and C
  • intramembranous associated with C3 nephritic factor (too much complement activation)
  • Also asociated with SLE, subacute bacterial endocarditis
  • “tram track” appearance
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13
Q

What is the tx for membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis?

A

steroids with ASA or dipyramidole may delay progression of renal disease

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