GLOMERULONEPHRITIS PRINCIPLES Flashcards
What are the 3 layers of the glomerular filtration barrier?
- Fenestrated capillary endothelium: first barrier to filtration
- Basement membrane: made of negatively charged molecules → repels negatively charged molecules such as albumin, also size barrier
- Podocytes (epithelial cells): foot processes wrap capillaries, splits between foot processes filter blood
What are the hallmarks of glomerular disease on urine dipstick?
Haematuria and proteinuria
What can cause a false positive urine dipstick test when looking at protein?
Dehydration
What are the two syndromes on either end of the spectrum of glomerular disease?
Nephritic syndrome: blood and protein loss, renal failure
Nephrotic syndrome: massive proteinuria (largely albumin), hyperlipidaemia
Explain why nephrotic syndrome is a hypercoagulable state
Protein loss causes loss of antithrombin III leading to increased thrombosis risk
Why are patients with nephrotic syndrome more prone to infection?
Loss of immunoglobulins
Which glomerular barriers are damaged in nephrotic vs nephritic syndrome?
- Nephrotic: protein barrier damaged
- Nephritic: entire glomeruli damaged
Someone presenting with dark urine, swelling, fatigue and proteinuria of less than 3.5 g per day likely has which syndrome?
Nephritic syndrome
How is most glomerular disease diagnosed?
Kidney biopsy