Glomerular Pathology Flashcards

1
Q

What are renal cortical compartments?

A

Glomerular = site of filtration

Tubular = PCT, DCT

Interstitial = small space between tubules

Vascular = blood apply particular efferent/afferent arterioles

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2
Q

What is the role of mesangial cells?

A

Hold capillaries in place within bowmans capsule

Remove trapped residues and aggregated proteins from the basement mem = filter free of debris

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3
Q

Describe the layers of the glomerulus

A

Podocyte foot processes – slit processes reside

Layer of basement mem

Endothelium – fenestrated

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4
Q

What happens when the kidney filter blocks?

A

Lowers GFR

= renal failure

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5
Q

What happens when the kidney filter leaks?

A

Proteinuria

Haematuria

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6
Q

Define nephrotic syndrome

A

Proteinuria (mostly albumin)

> 3.5g of protein loss in 24hrs

Presents = proteinuria, oedema, high cholesterol (loss of cholesterol binding proteins), hypoalbuminaema

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7
Q

Define nephritic syndrome

A

Blood in urine (may have small amount of protein)

Injury to endothelium in capillary loops

In acute renal failure

Hypertensive = normal BP regulation by the kidney is lost

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8
Q

Renal injury can be classified as?

A

Primarily = kidney only

Secondary = effect whole body

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9
Q

What are the common causes of nephritic syndrome?

A

IgA

Anti-GBM

Post-infectious

Lupus

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10
Q

What are the primary and secondary causes of nephrotic disease?

A

Site of injury = podocyte/subepithelial

Primary causes =

1) minimal change glomerulonephritis
2) focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS)
3) membranous glomerulonephritis

Secondary causes =

1) DM

High protein loss = oedema

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11
Q

Outline minimal change glomerulonephritis

A

Young

Heavy proteinuria = damage to podocytes = cant selectively filter

Steroids

May recur

Glomerulus appears completely normal on H+E

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12
Q

What is the pathogenesis of minimal change glomerulonephritis?

A

Unknown circulating factor damaging podocytes

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13
Q

Outline focal segmental glomerulosclerosis FSGS

A

Nephrotic

Adult

Less steroid responsive due to scaring

Glomerulosclerosis = scaring of glomerulus

Unknown circulating factors damaging podocytes = loss of selectivity

Progressive to renal failure – but transplant will also get FSGS

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14
Q

Outline membranous glomerulonephritis

A

Adults

Third will get better
Third will not get worse
Third will progress to renal failure

Immune complex deposits in the glomerulus = loss of selectivity

Autoimmune

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15
Q

How does DM effect the kidney?

A

Proteinuria

Renal failure

Microvascular damage

Mesangial sclerosis = nodules

Basement membrane thickening (6-7x)

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16
Q

What is the most common cause of haematuria?

A

IgA nephropathy

17
Q

Describe IgA nephropathy

A

IgA deposited into mesangium

Commonest glomerulonephritis

Any age

Haematuria

Relationship with mucosal infections

+/- proteinuria

Renal failure

No treatment

18
Q

Name some hereditary causes of nephropathies

A

Thin GBM nephropathy

Alport syndrome = abnormal collagen 4 = abnormal GBM

19
Q

Discuss Goodpatures syndrome

A

AutoAb to collagen 4 in basement mem

Rapidly progressive to renal failure

Treated by immunosuppression

20
Q

What is vasculitis?

A

Neutrophils become abnormally activated against blood vessels

Treatable if caught early