Paediatric GU - HSP and Nephrotic syndrome Flashcards

1
Q

What is Henoch-Schonlein purpura?

A

Henoch Schonlein Purpura - IgA mediated autoimmune hypersensitivity vasculitis involving small blood vessels

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2
Q

When does Henoch-Schonlein purpura usually present?

A

Following an infection or vaccination
Winter months
Mostly in boys
75% <10yo - peak 4-6yo

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3
Q

How does Henoch-Schonlein purpura present?

A

Mildly unwell with low grade fever

Abdominal pain and bloody diarrhoea

Rash

Knee and ankle pain, swelling and tenderness

Renal problems - 40%

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4
Q

What rash is seen in Henoch-Schonlein purpura?

A

Symmetrical erythematous macular rash which evolve into raised purpuric rash

Back of legs, buttocks and ulnar side of arms

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5
Q

What renal manifestation can Henoch-Schonlein purpura have?

A

Glomerulonephritis - microscopic haematuria and mild proteinuria

Nephrotic syndrome

Small minority - end stage failure

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6
Q

How is Henoch-Schonlein purpura diagnosed?

A

Clinical diagnosis but lab results expected:

Urinalysis - haematuria and proteinuria
Bloods - raised WCC, ESR and eosinophilia
Serum IgA raised

Can do abdominal USS

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7
Q

What differentials are considered for Henoch-Schonlein purpura?

A

Intussusception
SLE
Thrombocytopenia

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8
Q

How is Henoch-Schonlein purpura managed?

A

Mostly self limiting - supportive treatment

Avoid NSAID’s for pain

Steroids and immunosuppressants can be trialled - inconsistent results

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9
Q

What follow up is required for Henoch-Schonlein purpura?

A

Blood pressure
Urinalysis

Monthly unto 6 months
1 year check renal function after

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10
Q

What happens in nephrotic syndrome?

A

Damage to the basement membrane of the glomerulus leads to protein leakage

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11
Q

What triad is classical of nephrotic syndrome?

A

Proteinuria >3.5g/day
Hypoalbuminaemia <30g/l
Oedema

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12
Q

What is the most common primary idiopathic cause of nephrotic syndrome?

A

Minimal change glomerulonephritis - podocytes damaged

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13
Q

What are some secondary causes of nephrotic syndrome?

A
SLE
HSP
NSAID's
Leukaemia and lymphoma
Alport
Diabetes
HIV
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14
Q

How does nephrotic syndrome present?

A

Facial swelling - periorbital often first
Frothy urine
Generalised symptoms - fatigue, weakness, no appetite
Thrombosis
Leukonychia
Raised JVP

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15
Q

How is nephrotic syndrome diagnosed?

A

Urinalysis - proteinuria
Protein:creatinine ratio
Renal USS

MSU - rule out UTI
FBC, U&E, LFT, coag, CRP, HIV/hep screen, autoimmune screen, fasting glucose, lipids - rule out secondary causes

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16
Q

What is the mortality of nephrotic syndrome?

A

3%

17
Q

How is steroid sensitive nephrotic syndrome managed?

A

2/3 respond to prednisolone

80% relapse - cyclophosphamide, ciclosporin or mycphenolate

18
Q

How is steroid resistant nephrotic syndrome managed?

A

Ciclosporin and tacrolimus

19
Q

What other things are important in the management of nephrotic syndrome?

A

Pneumococcal vaccine
Low salt diet
Furosemide - oedema

20
Q

What complications are associated with nephrotic syndrome?

A

Infection - immunoglobulin loss in urine

Thromboembolism and hyperlipidaemia - clotting factors and lipids bound to albumin so increased free levels