Nephrotic syndrome Flashcards

1
Q

Nephrotic syndrome

A

Basement membrane in glomerulus becomes highly permeable to protein

Allows protein to leak from blood into urine

Most common between age 2-5

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2
Q

Triad presentation

A

Low serum albumin (<30g/L)

High urine protein content (>3 on dipstick)

Oedema

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3
Q

Other features

A

Deranged lipid profile

High BP

Hyper-coagulability

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4
Q

Causes

A

Most common cause in children in minimal change disease (no underlying condition or pathology)

Secondary to intrinsic kidney disease (focal segmental glomerulonephritis, membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis)

Secondary to systemic illness (Henoch schonlein purpura, diabetes, infection)

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5
Q

Minimal change disease

A

Renal biopsy and standard microscopy doesn’t detect any abnormalities

Urinalysis shows small molecular weight proteins and hyaline casts

Management with corticosteroids

Good prognosis

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6
Q

Management of nephrotic syndrome

A

High dose steroids (if steroid resistant use ACEi and immunosuppressants)

Low salt diet

Diuretics to treat oedema

ALbumin infusions

Antibiotic prophylaxis in severe cases

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7
Q

Complications

A

VTE (loss of antithrombin III and plasminogen in urine)

Hyperlipidaemia (ACS/ stroke)

CKD

Infection risk as urinary immunoglobulin loss

Hypocalcaemia

Hypovolaemia as fluid leaks from intravascular space into interstitial space (oedema and low BP)

Relapse

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