Glomerular Disease (Clinical) Flashcards
What is glomerulonephritis?
Acute inflammation of the kidney, typically caused by an immune response
What are glomerular diseases?
Immune-mediated disorders that affect the glomeruli
What are glomerular diseases classified by?
Based on kidney biopsy findings
What are the 2 different classifications of glomerular diseases?
- Proliferative
- IgA nephropathy
- Post infectious glomerulonephritis
- Crescentic glomerulonephritis
- Anti-GBM disease
- Non-proliferative
- Minimal change disease
- Focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis
- Membranous nephropathy
What are examples of proliferative glomerular diseases?
- IgA nephropathy
- Post infectious glomerulonephritis
- Crescentic glomerulonephritis
- Anti-GBM disease
What are some examples of non-proliferative glomerular diseases?
- Minimal change disease
- Focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis
- Membranous nephropathy
What are the 2 kinds of glomerulonephritis syndromes?
Nephritic syndrome
Nephrotic syndrome
What are some features of glomerulonephritis?
- Haematuria (non visible or visible)
- Proteinuria (low grade or nephrotic)
- Hypertension
- Renal impairment
What is observed if glomerulonephritis is in a nephritic state?
- Active urine sediment
- Haematuria
- Dysmorphic RBCs
- Cellular casts
- Hypertension
- Renal impairment
What is observed if glomerulonephritis is in a nephrotic state?
- Body passes too much protein in urine
- Oedema
- Nephrotic range proteinuria
- >3.5g/day or 350mg/mmol creatinine
- Hypoalbuminaemia
- Serum albumin <35g/L
What is the range of proteinuria required to be considered a nephrotic syndrome?
- >3.5g/day or 350mg/mmol creatinine
What is the difference between nephritic and nephrotic syndromes?
Difference between nephritic and nephrotic is that nephrotic syndrome involves the loss of a lot of protein whereas nephritic syndrome involves the loss of a lot of blood
What is proliferative glomerulonephritis defined as?
Excessive numnbers of cells in glomeruli, these include infiltrating leucocytes
What is non-proliferative glomerulonephritis defined as?
Glomeruli look normal or have areas of scarring
They have normal numbers of cells
What are the pathological descriptions of glomerulonephritis depending on how much of the glomeruli is affected?
- Diffuse
- >50% of glomeruli affected
- Focal
- <50% of glomeruli affected
- Global
- All of the glomerulus affected
- Segmental
- Part of the glomerulus affected
What is the term used to describe >50% of the glomeruli is affected?
Diffuse
What is the term used to describe <50% of the glomeruli is affected?
Focal
What is the term used to describe all of the glomeruli is affected?
Global
What is the term used to describe part of the glomeruli is affected?
Segmental
Are non-proliferative diseases normally nephrotic or nephritic?
Nephrotic
Are proliferative diseases normally nephrotic or nephritic?
Nephritic
What is the commonest cause of glomerulonephritis?
IgA nephropathy
What is IgA nephropathy characterised by?
IgA deposition in th emesangium and mesangial proliferation
Who does IgA nephropathy most commonly occur in?
Most commonly occurs in 2nd and 3rd decade of life with males more commonly affected
Does IgA nephropathy affect more men or woman?
Men
What is the presentation of IgA nephropathy?
- Microscopic haematuria
- Microscopic haematuria and proteinuria
- Nephrotic syndrome
- IgA crescentic glomerulonephritis
What investigations are done for IgA nephropathy?
- Urine dip
- Blood pressure
- Ultrasound scan
- Renal biopsy
- eGFR