glomerular disease Flashcards
What is the cutoff between nephrotic and nephritic syndromes in terms of proteinuria?
-nephritic has less than 3.5 g of protein per day in 24 hr urine collection
What are the key labs/associations for nephrotic syndrome?
- > 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
What disease is similar to IgA nephropathy? What are key lab findings?
henoch schonlein purpura is similar. find increased serum IgA and mesangial cell proliferation
What is the treatment for IgA nephropathy?
ACE-I and statins for persistent proteinuria; consider steroids if nephrotic syndrome appears
What is the clinical presentation of goodpasture’s syndrome?
dyspnea, hemoptysis, myalgias, hematuria with IgG abs on against the glomerular and alveolar basement membranes
What is alport syndrome? Findings under microscope?
- 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
What are the three categories of rapidily progressive glomerulonephritis?
- anti-GBM (aka Goodpastures)
- immune complex deposition disease
- Pauci-immune- ANCA positive diseases like granulomatosis with polyangitis, churg-struass, mycroscopic polyangitis
What renal diseases are associated with low complement?
SLE, post strep glomerulonephritis, cryoglobulinemia, membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis, endocarditis
What is the most common cause of nephrotic syndrome in adults in the US? What conditions is it associated with?
FSGS
associateud with HIV and drug use, sickle cell- but often idiopathic
also most common in Af. americans and hispanics
When are ACE-Is and statins helpful in glomerular disease?
-reduce proteinuria. listed for lupus nephritis, alport syndrome, IgA nephropathy, membranous glomerulonephritis
ACE-I obviously also helpful for diabetic nephropathy
What is membranous nephropathy and what are associated conditions?
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)
What is membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis?
- 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
What is the tx for membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis?
steroids with ASA or dipyramidole may delay progression of renal disease