the importance of proteinuria W1 Flashcards

1
Q

spelling?!!?!!!!

A

proteinuria (not urea)

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2
Q

what important proteins do the kidneys make

A

erythropoietin (epo)
active vitamin D
renin

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3
Q

function of erythropoietin

A

hormone which stimulates the bone marrow to produce red blood cells

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4
Q

what is proteinuria a cardinal sign of?

A

kidney disease

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5
Q

when should testing for proteinuria be carried out?

A

any routine medical consultation
oedema
part of care of patients with hypertension, diabetes mellitus etc
if a systemic disease is possible

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6
Q

oedema features

A

ascites (oedema in abdomen)
pleural effusions

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7
Q

what does colour coding on test strips show you when testing for proteinuria?

A

trace
1+
2+
3+
4+

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8
Q

what does 2+ proteins in urine imply

A

implies intrinsic renal disease and very unlikely to be explained by asymptomatic infection

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9
Q

why is the albumin/creatinine ratio used?

A

accurately correct for eg volume, concentration

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10
Q

albumin?

A

protein which doesn’t usually appear in the urine in significant quantities

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11
Q

units for albumin/creatinine ratio? what can this be performed on?

A

mg/mmol
performed on small urine sample taken any time of the day

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12
Q

what approximates the amount of albumin in 24 hours

A

ACR (albumin creatinine ratio) x10 approximates to mg of albumin in 24 hours

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13
Q

ACR levels meaning?

A

<3.5 is normal
3.5-30 = microalbuminuria
>30 = (macro)albuminuria

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14
Q

measurements of excretory renal function?

A

plasma/serum creatinine
estimated GFR (MDRD formula - sex, age, race, creatinine)
creatinine clearance (creatinine in blood compared to excreted but old fashioned)
isotope GFR (inject radioactive isotope, very formal)

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15
Q

what do different creatinine measures mean for different people?

A

if its high in elderly, female, slim then more of an indicator of low GFR than if its high in muscular, young, male as creatinine is a breakdown product of muscle.

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16
Q

what does the number of functioning nephrons decrease with? which ethnicities may have fewer nephrons?

A

number of functioning nephrons decreases with age
Black and Asian people may have fewer nephrons

17
Q

congenital nephrotic syndrome?

A

massive leakage of protein into urine.
ascites
can be kept alive with dialysis
may need kidneys removed (will need dialysis, transplant)

18
Q

what is congenital nephrotic syndrome due to

A

mutation in podocyte specific gene eg nephrin

19
Q

asymptomatic 50 yr old man with ++ protein and ++ blood - investigations?

A

BP
test for diabetes
quantify proteinuria
check kidney function
renal ultrasound
renal biopsy?

20
Q

what does the presence of blood and protein in the urine imply

A

glomerular disease - therefore urgent need to test excretory kidney function.
consider systemic diseases (eg vasculitis, lupus)

21
Q

what does albuminuria imply in diabetes and hypertension

A

in diabetes - earliest feature of diabetic nephropathy
in hypertension - suggests primary renal cause

22
Q

albuminuria and cardiovascular disease?

A

albuminuria is a potent independent cardiovascular risk factor in both diabetic and non-diabetic populations and aggressive management of cardiovascular risk is indicated.

23
Q

16 year old female with recent onset of severe body swelling - investigations?
treatment?

A

BP
test for diabetes/other systemic diseases
quantify proteinuria
check kidney function
renal ultrasound
renal biopsy

treatment - corticosteroids, other drugs

24
Q

nephrotic syndrome features?

A

oedema
heavy proteinuria
hypoalbuminaemia

25
Q

nephrotic syndrome - features not included in definition but still clinically important?

A

thrombotic risk
propensity to infection
often severe hyperlipidaemia

26
Q

what may/may not nephrotic syndrome be associated with

A

impairment of excretory kidney function

27
Q

symptoms of nephrotic syndrome

A

severe lethargy
reduced exercise tolerance
nausea
loss of appetite

28
Q

causes of nephrotic kidney syndrome

A

glomerulonephritis
diabetes
infections (hep B/C, malaria, HIV)
amyloid (deposition in glomeruli)

29
Q

20 year old woman with short history of rash and painful small joints in both hands and feet.
+protein, +++blood
what does this indicate?

A

increased blood over protein indicates inflammation in glomerulus - glomerular nephritis

30
Q

ANCA?

A

anti-neutrophil cytoplasm antibody

31
Q

what does haematuria indicate?

A

haematuria, whether visible (macroscopic) or non-visible (microscopic) can be a sign of a serious systemic disease for which diagnosis and treatment is very urgent, whether or not there is also albuminuria

32
Q

diseases where the glomerulus is damaged?

A

rare genetic/developmental disorders
diabetes mellitus
vascular disease/ischaemia/age
vasculitis (isolated/systemic)
inflammation of glomerulus itself (glomerulonephritis)
deposition diseases (eg amyloid, myeloma)