Glomerulonephritis Flashcards
What is glomerulonephritis?
Inflammation of the glomeruli
What are the 2 types of syndromes which occur with the kidneys?
- Nephritic
- Nephrotic
What is nephritic syndrome?
- Haematuria
- Reduced urine output
- Proteinuria but minimal
- Fluid retention
What is the most common cause of primary glomerulonephritis?
IgA nephropathy - occurs in younger patients following an URTI with histology showing IgA deposits and mesangial proliferation
What are other causes of nephritic syndrome?
- Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis - immune complex deposits and mesangial proliferation
- Post-strep glomerulonephritis which presents 1-3 weeks after a strep infection
- Systemic diseases e.g. HSP, SLE and microscopic polyangiitis or granulomatosis with polyangiitis
What are the renal biopsy features of post-strep glomerulonephritis?
- Endothelial proliferation with neutrophils
- Sub epithelial humps due to lumpy immune complex deposits
- Immunofluorescence shows ‘starry sky’ appearance
What is nephrotic syndrome?
Where the basement membrane in the glomerulus becomes highly permeable resulting in proteinuria
What are the features of nephrotic syndrome?
- Proteinuria
- Low serum albumin
- Peripheral oedema
- Hypercholesterolemia
What does nephrotic syndrome predispose to?
- Thrombosis
- HTN
- High cholesterol
What is the main cause of nephrotic syndrome in children?
Minimal change disease
What is the pathophysiology of minimal change disease?
podocyte fusion and effacement of the podocyte foot processes on renal biopsy.
What are the causes of nephrotic syndrome in adults?
- Membranous nephropathy where immune complexes deposit in the glomerular basement membrane resulting in thickening and proteinuria -> histology shows IgA deposits and complement deposits
- HSP
- Diabetes
- Infection such as HIV
What are the antibodies for Goodpasture, Microscopic polyangiitis and Granulomatosis with polyangiitis?
Anti-GBM - Goodpastures
p-ANCA - Microscopic polyangiitis
c-ANCA - granulomatosis with polyangiitis
How are nephrotic/nephritis syndromes managed?
- Renal biopsy for histology
- Renal referral
- Supportive care including dialysis
- Immunosuppresion if needed