Glomerulopathy (Yr4) Flashcards

1
Q

what is the hallmark of glomerulopathy?

A

proteinurea

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2
Q

how can proteinuria be quantified?

A

urine protein:creatinine concentration (UPCR)

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3
Q

do cases of glomerulpathy of tubulointerstitial disease tend to have a large magnitude proteinuria?

A

glomerulopathy

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4
Q

why will glomerulopathies always eventually present as azotaemic (even if they don’t initially)?

A

proteinuria causes damage to tubules, leading to loss of nephrons

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5
Q

what is the difference between the cause of proteinuria in glomerulopathy and interstitial disease?

A

glomerulopathy… more protein is filtered as the glomerulus is damaged meaning larger gaps for protein to pass through
tubulointerstitial… reduced re-absorption of protein by the proximal convoluted tubules

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6
Q

are cats more commonly seen with glomerulopathies or tubulointerstitial disease?

A

tubulointerstitial disease (such as CKD)

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7
Q

what is the main cause of glomerulopathies?

A

type III hypersensitivities (circulating immunoglobulins become trapped in the glomeruli and activate complement)

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8
Q

what patients are predisposed to amyloidosis?

A

shar-peis, Abyssinian, siamese

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9
Q

how does amyloidosis cause glomerulopathy?

A

amyloid protein plaques get deposited in the glomeruli, causing leakage of protein and inflammation which further exacerbates disease

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10
Q

what is the gold standard for diagnosis of glomerulopathies?

A

renal biopsy

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11
Q

what dogs breeds are associated with amyloidosis?

A

shar-peis

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12
Q

what happens during shar-pei fever complex?

A

waxing/waning pyrexia and swelling of hocks which resolve without treatment
eventually deposition of protein in the glomerulus causes renal disease

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13
Q

what is the treatment typically used for amyloidosis?

A

colchicine… anti-fibrotic so breaks down amyloid plaques (no evidence to support its use)

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14
Q

what is typically the first test used to screen for proteinuria?

A

dipstick

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15
Q

what three things do we need to check for when presented with proteinuria?

A

location (rule out pre and post renal)
persistence (3 samples two weeks apart)
magnitude (UPCR)

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16
Q

what treatments are used for glomerulopathies?

A

RAAS blockades and steroids
anti-platelet and anti-coagulant therapy

17
Q

what are the options for RAAS blockade therapy?

A

angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors (benazepril)
angiotensin receptor blockers (telmisartan)

18
Q

what is an example of an ACE inhibitor?

A

benazepril

19
Q

what is an example of an angiotensin receptor blocker?

A

telmisartan

20
Q

what is the mechanism by which RAAS blockade helps to treat glomerulopathies?

A

causes relaxation of the afferent and efferent arterioles which reduces GFR

21
Q

other than reducing GFR, how does dilation of the afferent/efferent arterioles aid the kidney in glomerulopathies?

A

means better perfusion to the rest of the nephron

22
Q

what is a negative effect of RAAS blockade for glomerulopathy treatment?

A

decreased GFR means decreased excretion of creatinine, potassium and phosphate meaning they become more azotaemic (and possibly uraemic)

23
Q

what effect does telmisartan and benazepril have on systemic blood pressure?

A

decreased

24
Q

how can steroids help in the treatment of glomerulopathies?

A

most glomerulopathies are as a result of immune complexes, so immunosuppressive therapy can aid treatment (and even be curative)

25
Q

why is anti-platelet and anti-coagulant therapy indicated for glomerulopathies?

A

they are in a hypercoaguable state partly due to anti-thrombin loss through the kidney

26
Q

what is the anti-platelet therapy used for glomerulopathies?

A

clopidogrel (superior to aspirin)

27
Q

what anti-coagulant treatment is used for patients with glomerulopathies?

A

dalteparin (SC injection)
rivaroxaban (oral)

28
Q

what is the treatment of choice for hypertension in glomerulopathy cases?

A

benazepril (dogs)
amlodipine (cats)

29
Q

what diet should be used in glomerulopathy cases?

A

high quality, moderately restricted protein diet (same as CKD)
low phosphate of CKD diet also beneficial
(more important that animal eats the diet as weight loss is associated with poor prognosis)

30
Q

what are the three characteristics of nephrotic syndrome?

A

hypoalbuminaemia (protein losing nephropathy)
peripheral oedema
hypercholesterolaemia (changes in metabolism due to apolipoprotein loss through kidneys)

31
Q

what is the prognosis for nephrotic syndrome?

A

very grave prognosis

32
Q

what are the two general categories of glomerulopathys?

A

acquired and familial

33
Q

what presenting signs would lead you to suspect a glomerulopathy?

A

unexpected proteinuria on urinalysis
hypertension of unknown origin
hypoalbuminaemia/hypercholesterolaemia
thromboembolic events
at risk breeds

34
Q

how can oedema associated with glomerulopathy be treated?

A

diuretics (furosemide, spironolactone)