The Kidney Flashcards

1
Q

What causes most glomerular disease

A

Immune mediated

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2
Q

What causes most tubular and interstitial diseases

A

Toxic or infectious

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3
Q

Glomerular, tubular and interstitial diseases damage what and lead to what

A

All four components of the kidney (glomeruli, tubules, interstitial, and blood vessels) and culminate in “end stage kidneys”

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4
Q

Azotomia

A

Elevation of BUN and creatinine levels

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5
Q

What causes azotemia

A

Decreased GFR

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6
Q

Prerenal azotomia

A

Hypoperfusion of kidneys

BUN/Cr>20

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7
Q

Postrenal azotemia

A

Obstruction distal to kidney

BUN/Cr<20

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8
Q

Uremia

A

Axotomia become associated with a constellation of clinical signs and symptoms and biochemical abnormalities

  • failure of renal excretory function
  • metabolic and endocrine dysfunctions resulting from renal damage
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9
Q

Nephritis syndrome

A

More hematuria/sicker

Caused by glomerular disease

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10
Q

Presentation nephritis syndrome

A

Acute onset of grossly visible hematuria or microscopic hematuria with dystrophic RBCs and red cell casts on urinalysis, diminished GFR, *mild to moderate proteinuria, and hypertension

HEMATURIA, AZOTEMIA, HYPERTENSION, AND SUB-NEPHROTIC (MILD TO MODERATE) PROTEINURIA

CLASSIC PRESENTATION OF ACUTE POSTSTREPTOCOCCAL GLOMERULONEPHRITIS

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11
Q

RAPIDLY PROGRESSIVE GLOMERULONEPHRITIS (RPGN)

A

NEPHRITIC SYNDROME WITH RAPID DECLINE IN GFR (HOURS TO DAYS)

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12
Q

SCHITTT for rapidly progressice glomerulonephritis

A

Stones, congenital anomalies, hemoglobinopathy, infection, intrinsic kidney disease, latrogenic/instrumentation, trauma, tumor, tb, toxins

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13
Q

Nephrotic syndrome

A

More proteinuria (>3.5g/24 hours)
Due to glomerular disease
SEVERE PROTEINURIA

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14
Q

Describe proteinuria of nephrotic syndrome for highly selective and poorly selective

A

Highly selective: consists of low molecular weight proteins in the urine like albumin and transferrin

Poorly selective: higher weight proteins in addition to albumin

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15
Q

Nephrotic syndrome lab values

A

Hypoalbuminemia

Hyperlipidemia

Lipiduria

More likely to become infected

Hypercoagulable

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16
Q

Hypoalbuminemia from nephrotic syndrome

A

Severe edema, espicially periorbital

Soft and pitting

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17
Q

Hyperlipidemia nephrotic syndrome

A

Except for decrease in HDL

Lipids in the urine can be free or oval (reabsorbed, but then released when the tubular celll died and detached)

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18
Q

Infection of nephrotic syndrome

A

Staphylococcus and pneumococcal infections

From loss of immunoglobulins in the urine

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19
Q

Hypercoagulable state nephrotic syndrome

A

Due to los of anti-coagulants (entithrombin III) in the urine

Can lead to renal vein thrombosis

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20
Q

Morphology nephrotic syndrome

A

Membranous glomerlupathy, minimal change, and FSGS (focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, mixed nephrotic/nephritic)

Subepithelial deposits !!

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21
Q

What causes acute kidney injury

A

Glomerular, interstitial, vascular or acute tubular injury

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22
Q

Characterization acute kidney injury

A

Rapid decline in GFR (hours to days) with concurrent dysregulation of electrolytes and fluid and retention of metabolic waste products that can lead to oliguria or anuria in severe cases

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23
Q

Acute tubular necrosis

A

Old term for acute kidney disease (doesn’t necessarily imply glomerular disease)

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24
Q

What causes chronic kidney disease

A

End result of all chronic renal parenchymal diseases most commonly diabetes and hypertension

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25
Q

What is the major cause of death from renal disease

A

Chronic kidney disease

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26
Q

How is chronic kidney disease clinically defined

A

Dismissed GFR that is persistently less than 60ml/min/1.73m^2 for at least 3 months and/or persistent albuminuria

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27
Q

End stage renal disease

A

GFR less than 5% of normal

Terminal stage of uremia

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28
Q

Renal tubular defects

A

Due to diseases that directly affect the tubular structures

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29
Q

What do renal tubular defects lead to

A

Polyuria, nocturia, and electrolyte dysregulation (metabolic acidosis)

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30
Q

UTI

A

Bacteriuria and pyuria (bacteria and leukocytes int he urine)

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31
Q

Pyelonephritis

A

UTI effects the kidney

Present with fever

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32
Q

Cystitis

A

UTI effects bladder

Does not present with fever

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33
Q

Nephrolithiasis

A

Renal stone associated with spasms of severe renal pain and hematuria

Often have recurrent stone formation

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34
Q

Primary glomerulonephritis

A

Disorders in which the kidney is the only or predominant organ involved

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35
Q

Secondary glomerular disease

A

When the glomerulus is affected by systemic immunological diseases such as SLE, vascular disorders such as HTN or metabolic diseases such as FABry disease

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36
Q

What are glomerular diseases associated with

A

Systemic disorders and patients who present with glomerular disease should be evaluated to underlying disorders

DM, SLE< vasculitis, amyloidosis

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37
Q

Glomerulopathy

A

No ellular inflammatory component

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38
Q

What are the two laters of epithelial cells (glomerulus)

A

Visceral (podocytes)

Parietal epithelium

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39
Q

Visceral epithelial cells

A

Incorporated into and become an intrinsic part of the capillary wall

Important for maintence of glomerular barrier function

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40
Q

What separated wth visceral from parietal layers

A

Basement membrane

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41
Q

Parietal epithelium

A

On the bowman capsule

Lines the urinary space (cavity in which plasma filtrate first collects)

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42
Q

Glomerular basement membrane

A

Thick, electron dense central layer==lamina densa

Thinner, electron lucent peripheral layers==lamina rara interna and lamina rara externa

Type IV collagen, laminae, polyanionic proteoglycans (mostly heparin sulfate), fibronectin, entactin, and several other glycoproteins

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43
Q

The glomerular filtration barrier has a size and charge selectivity function. Describe what is is permeable to

A

Smaller molecules
Cationic molecules

Albumin=smal, low molecular weight, anionic protein

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44
Q

Albuminuria

A

Nephropathy

Albumin Completely excluded from the filtrate

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45
Q

In most forms of __ __, loss of normal slit diaphragms is a key event in the development of proteinuria

A

Glomerular injury

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46
Q

Acute glomerular response to injury

A

Hypercellularity and formation of crescents

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47
Q

Chronic glomerular responses to injury

A

Basement membrane thickening, hyalinosis, and sclerosis

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48
Q

What is hypercellularity and when is it seen

A

Increase in the number of cells in the glomerular tufts

Seen with inflammatory diseases

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49
Q

What causes hypercellularity

A

Proliferation of endothelial or mesangial cells

Endocapillary proliferation

Formation of crescents

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50
Q

Mesangial cells

A

Mesenchyme derived and are contractile, phagocytes, and capable of proliferation; also capable of laying down matrix and collagen, and capable of secreting several biologically active mediators

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51
Q

Endocapillary proliferation:

A

infiltration of leukocytes with swelling and proliferation of the mesangial and endothelial cells

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52
Q

Formation of crescents

A

Accumulations of cells composed of proliferating glomerular epithelial cells and infiltrating leukocytes following an immune/inflammatory injury involving the capillary walls

  • plasma proteins leak into he space that leads to the activation of coagulation factors
  • activation of coagulation factors, particularly thrombin , may be a stimulus for crescent formation
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53
Q

BM thickening: LM

A

Thickening of the cap walls as seen with PAS staining

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54
Q

BM thickening EM

A

Can see three different forms

  1. Deposition of amorphous electron dense material, most often immune complexes (type III hypersensitivity)
  2. Increased synthesis of protein components of the BM (diabetic glomerulosclerisis)
    - diabetes tends to show a focal nodular glomerulosclerosis with diffuse glomerulosclerosis
  3. Formation of additional layers of the B< matrices that often occupy subendothelial locations and can be poorly organized to fully duplicate lamina densa (membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis)
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55
Q

Hyalinosis

A

Accumulation of material that is homogenous and eosinophilic by light microscopy

H build up of hyaline from circulating proteins that are transported to the ECM

End result of various forms of glomerular damage

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56
Q

What causes hyalinosis

A

Endothelial or capillary wall injury after glomerular damage occurs

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57
Q

What does hyalinosis cause

A

Obliterate the capillary lumens in the glomerular tufts

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58
Q

Sclerosis

A

Deposition of ECM collagen—stain with trichromatic stain (blue)

Typically builds up in mesangial areas (diabetic glomerulosclerosis), capillary loops or both

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59
Q

What can sclerosis lead to

A

Obliterate the capillary lumens in the glomerular tufts

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60
Q

__ mechanisms underlie most forms of primary glomerulopathy and many of the secondary glomerular disorders

A

Immune

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61
Q

two mechanisms of glomerular injury

A

Injury by antibodies reacting in situ within the glomerulus
(Major cause of glomerulonephritis)

Goodpasture syndrome

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62
Q

Injury to antibodies reacting in situ within the glomerulus

A

Immune complexes are formed locally by antibodies that react with intrinsic tissue antigen or with extrinsic antigens “planted” in the glomerulus from the circulaition

Membranous nephropathy=classic example=nephrotic syndrome (proteinuria)

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63
Q

Membranous nephropathy-classic example of nephrotic syndrome

A

Antibody binging to PLA2R present in the glomerular epithelial cell membrane is followed by complement activation and then shedding of the immune aggregates from the cell surface to form characteristic deposits of immune complexes along the subepithelial aspect of the basement membrane

LM-thickened basement membrane->membranous nephropathy

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64
Q

Pattern of deposition on IF in membranous nephropathy

A

Granular (rather than linear)=very localized antigen-antibody interaction

Immune complexes=granular

Anti-GBM -linear immunofluoresence

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65
Q

Who does membranous nephropathy develop in

A

Small number of infants fed on cows milk (planted antigen)

Antibodies to bovine albumin

Lesions contain bovine milk antigens

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66
Q

Good pasture syndrome

A

Simultaneous lung and kidney lesions (hematuria and hemoptysis)

-due to anti-GBM antibodies that cross react with other basement membranes, espicially those in the lung alveoli

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67
Q

Good pasture common?

A

Very rare,

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68
Q

What does good pasture cause

A

Severe necrotizing and crescenteric glomerular damage and the clinical syndrome of rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis

Recurrent hemoptysis our even life threatening pulmonary hemorrhage, but this is a renal disease

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69
Q

Glomerular injury results from

A

Deposition of circulating antigen antibody complexes int he glomerulus with subsequent formation of immune complexes in situ

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70
Q

Patterns of deposition glomerular injury IF (immunofluorescence)

A

Immune complexes shows a granular pattern of deposition-membranous nephropathy

Autoantibodies against components of the GBM show linear pattern of deposition
-goodpasture

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71
Q

Initiation of inflammatory damages that induce glomerulonephritis

Any combination of the following

A
  • antibody-antigen deposition=type III hypersensitivity, circulating Ag-Ab(granular IF)
  • antibody basement membrane =type II hypersensitivity, goodpasture (diffuse linear immunofluorescence)
  • antibody-antigen planted=type II hypersensitivity, Ag stuck in glomerulus (granular IF)
  • T cell damage-type IV hypersensitivity (4 Ts=touching, transplant, T, T cell mediated), reaction to Ag in endothelium
  • no IF, no immune deposition
  • not entirely proved
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72
Q

Pathogenesis of glomerulonephritis: charge and size of the ag-ab complexes makes a difference

A

Charge and size of the ag-ab complexes makes a difference:
-very cationic ag-ab tend to cross the GBM and stay int he subepithelial areas, typically not causing inflammatory reactions

-very anionic ag-ab do not crosss the GBM and are trapped subendothelially or are not nephritogenic

Neutral charge molecules accumulate int he mesangium

Large complexes are not typically nephrogenic

Circulating immune cells are most likely to see and be activated by complexes int he mesangium and subendothelial areas

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73
Q

Pathogenesis of glomerulonephritis

A

Charge and size

Short term injury is cleared by macrophages and the itis is limited

Long term injury (lupus) causes persistent damage that becomes chronic

Different injuries occur at different rates until GFR=30-50%, then they progress

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74
Q

Progression glomerulonephritis

A

Once the GFR gets down between 30-50% , progression is constant, irrelevant of the severity or time course of the underlying insult that caused it

Target therapy, since all diseases must funnel to one final progression mechanism

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75
Q

Key concepts pathogenesis of immune mediated glomerular injury

A

-antibody mediated immune injury is an important mechanism of glomerular damage, mainly cia complement and leukocyte mediated pathways. Antibodies may also be directly cytotoxic to cells int he glomerulus

The most common forms of antibody mediated glomerulonephritis are caused by the formation of immune complexes, which may involve either endogenous antigens (PLA2R in membranous nephropathy) or exogenous (microbial) antigens. Immune complexes show a granular pattern of deposition by IF

Autoantibodies against components of the GBM are the cause of anti-GBM antibody mediated disease, often associated with severe injury. The pattern of antibody deposition is linear by IF

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76
Q

Progression of glomerular disease key concepts

A

Progressice glomerular injury can be result of either primary or secondary glomerular injuries, of diseases that are either renal limited or systemic, and of diseases that initially involve renal structures other than glomeruli

The principal glomerular manifestation of progressive injury is focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, eventually leading to global glomerular involvement and glomerular obsolescence

Progressice injury ensues from a cycle of glomerular and nephron loss, compensatory changes that lead to further glomerular injury and glomerulosclerosis, and eventually end stage renal disease

Progressive glomerular injury is accompanied by chronic injuries to other renal structures, typically manifest as tubulointerstitial fibrosis

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77
Q

Activation of the alternative complement pathway

A

In dense deposit disease, until recently referred to as membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (MPGN type II) and in an emerging diagnostic category of diseases broadly termed C3 glomerulopathies.

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78
Q

Mediators of glomerular injury

A

Once immune reactants or sensitized T cells have localized in the glomerulus, the mediators-both cells and molecules-are the usual suspects involved in acute and chronic inflammation

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79
Q

Neutrophils and monocytes infiltrate the glomerulus in certain types of glomerulonephritis

A

Result of activation of complement, resulting in generation of chemotactic agents (C5a), but also by Fc-mediated adherence and activation.

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80
Q

What do neutrophils do

A

Release proteases, which cause GBM degradation; oxygen-derived free radicals, which cause cell damage; and arachidonic acid metabolites, which contribute to the reductions in GFR

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81
Q

Macrophages and T cells

A

Infiltrate the glomerulus in antibody and cell mediated reactions, when activated, release a vast number of biologically active molecules

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82
Q

Platelets

A

May aggregate in the glomerulus during immune mediated injury. Their release of eicosanoids, growth factors and other medications may contribute to vascular injury and proliferation of glomerular cells. Antiplatelet agents have beneficial effects in both human and experimental glomerulonephritis

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83
Q

Resident glomerular cells

A

Particularly mesangial cells, can be stimulated to produce several inflammatory mediators, including ROS, cytokines, chemokine, growth factors, eicosanoids, NO, and endothelin. They may initiate inflammatory responses in the glomerulus even int he absence of leukocytic infiltration

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84
Q

Complement activation

A

Leads to generation of chemotactic products that induce leukocyte influx (complement neutrophil dependent injury) and the formation of C5b-C9, the membrane attack complex. C5b-c9 causes cell lysis but, in addition, stimulates mesangial cells to produce oxidants, proteases, and other mediators. Thus even in the absence of neutrophils, C5b-C9 can cause proteinuria, as has been demonstrated in experimental membranous glomerulopathy

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85
Q

Eicosanoids, NO, angiotensin and endothelin

A

Hemodynamics changes

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86
Q

Cytokines IL-1 and TNF

A

May be produced by infiltrating leukocytes and resident glomerular cells, induce leukocyte adhesion and a variety of other effects

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87
Q

Chemokines like monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 promote monocyte and lymphocyte influx

A

Growth factors such as PDGF Are involved in mesangial cell proliferation. TGF-B, CT growth factor, and fibroblast growth factor seem to be critical in the ECM deposition and hyalinization leading to glomerulosclerosis in chronic injury. Vascular endothelial growth factor VEGF seems to maintain endothelial integrity and may help regulate capillary permeability

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88
Q

Coagulation system

A

Also a mediator of glomerular damage. Fibrin is frequently present in the glomeruli and bowman space in glomerulonephritis, indicative of coagulation cascade activation, and activated coagulation factors, particularly thrombin, may be a stimulus for crescent formation

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89
Q

__ injury is common to many forms of both primary and secondary glomerular disease of both immune and non immune etiologies

A

Podocye

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90
Q

Podocytopathy

A

Diseases with disparate etiologies whose principal manifestation is injury to podocytes.

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91
Q

What causes podocytopathy

A

Antibodies to podocytes antigens; by toxins, as in an experimental model of proteinuria induced by puromycin aminonucleoside; conceivably by certain cytokines by certain viral infections such as HIV or by still inadequately characterized circulating factors, as in some cases of focal segmental glomerulosclerosis.

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92
Q

Podocytopathy morphology

A

Effacement of foot processes, vacuolization, and retraction and detachment of cells from the GBM, and functionally by proteinuria

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93
Q

Loss of podocytes

A

Have very little capacity for replication and repair

Feature of multiple types of glomerular injury including focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis and diabetic nephropathy

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94
Q

How can you see loss of podocytes

A

Specialized techniques

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95
Q

In most forms of glomerular injury, loss of normal slit diaphragms is key event in developing ___

A

Proteinuria

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96
Q

Functional abnormalities of the slit diaphragm cause genetics

A

Rare forms of nephrotic syndrome

Mutations in this components such as nephron and prodocin, without actual inflammatory damage to the glomerulus.

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97
Q

Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis is associated with what

A

Loss of renal mass

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98
Q

The adaptive changes in glomeruli (hypertrophy and glomerular capillary hypertension), as well as systemic hypertension, cause epithelial and endothelial injury and resultant ___

A

Proteinuria

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99
Q

The mesangial response , involving mesangial cell proliferationa nd ECM production, together with intraglomerular coagulation, causes the ____. This results in further loss of functioning nephrons and vicious circle of glomerulosclerosis

A

Glomerulosclerosis

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100
Q

What does reduction in renal mass cause

A

Systemic hypertension, intraglomerular hypertension, glomerular hypertrophy

Then

Mesangial cell hyperplasia/ECM deposition, intraglomerular coagulation, and epithelial/endothelial injury

Leading to

Glomerulosclerosis

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101
Q

What does epithelial/endothelial injury lead to

A

Glomerulosclerosis ad proteinuria

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102
Q

Intervention to interrupt glomerulosclerosis

A

Inhibitors of RAAS, which not only reduce intraglomerular hypertension, but also have direct effects on each of the mechanisms . They ameliorate progression of sclerosis

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103
Q

Key concepts progression fo glomerular disease

A

Progressive glomerular injury can be the result of either primary or secondary glomerular injuries of diseases that are either renal limited or systemic and of diseases that initially involve renal structures other than glomeruli

The principal glomerular manifestation of progressive injury is focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, eventually leading to global glomerular involvement and glomerular obsolescence

Progressive injury ensues from a. Cycles of glomerular and nephron loss, compensatory changes, that lead to further glomerular injury and glomerulosclerosis, and eventually end stage renal disease

Progressive glomerular injury is accompanied by chronic injuries to other renal structures, typically manifest as tubulointerstitial fibrosis

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104
Q

Postinfectious glomerulonephritis

Presentation, pathogenesis

A

NEPHRITIC syndrome

Immune complex mediated; circulating or planted antigen

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105
Q

Postinfectious glomerulonephritis

Light microscopy, fluorescence microscopy, electron microscopy

A

Diffuse endocapillary proliferation; leukocytic infiltration

Granular IgG and C3 in GBM and mesangium; granular IgA in some cases

Primarily subepithelial humps; subendothelial deposits in early disease states

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106
Q

Good pasture

Presentation, pathogenesis

A

Rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis

Anti-GBM COL4-A3 antigen

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107
Q

Goodpasture

Light microscopy, fluorescence microscopy, electron microscopy

A

Extracapilalry proliferation with crescents;necrosis

Linear IgG and C3; fibrin in crescents

No deposits; GBM disruptions; fibrin

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108
Q

Chronic glomerulonephritis

Presentation, pathogenesis

A

Chronic renal failure

Varible

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109
Q

Chronic glomerulonephritis

Light microscopy, fluorescence microscopy, electron microscopy

A

Hyalinized glomeruli, granular or negative

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110
Q

Membranous nephropathy

Presentation, pathogenesis

A

Nephrotic syndrome

In situ immune complex formation PLA2 antigen in most cases of primary disease mostly unknown

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111
Q

Membranous nephropathy light microscopy , fluorescence microscopy, electron microscopy

A

Diffuse capillary wall thickening

Granular IgG and C3; diffuse

Subepithelial deposits

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112
Q

Minimal change disease

Presentation, pathogenesis

A

Nephrotic syndrome

Unknown; loss of glomerular polyanion; podocytes injury

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113
Q

Minimal change disease

LM, FM, EM

A

Normal; lipid in tubules

Negative

Loss of foot processes; no deposits

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114
Q

Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis

Presentation
Path

A

Nephrotic syndrome; nonnephrotic proteinuria

Unknown ablation nephropathy plasma factor; podocytes injury

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115
Q

Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis LM FM EM

A

Focal and segmental sclerosis and hyalinosis

Focal; IgM+ C3 in many cases

Loss of foot processes; epithelial dehydration

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116
Q

Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis type I

Clinical
Path

A

Nephrotic/nephrotic syndrome

Immune complex

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117
Q

Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis type ILM FM EM

A

Mesangial proliferative or membranoproliferative patterns of proliferation; GBM thickening; splitting

IgG ++ C3;
C1q++C4

Subendothelial deposits

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118
Q

Dense deposit disease (MPGN type II)
Presentation
Path

A

Hematuria, chronic renal failure

Autoantibody; alternative complement pathway

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119
Q

Dense deposit (MPGN type II) LM FM EM

A

Mesangial proliferative or membranoproliferative patterns of proliferation; GBM thickening; splitting

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120
Q

Dense deposit disease (MPGN type II)

LM FM EM

A

Mesangial proliferative or membranoproliferative patterns of proliferation; GBM thickening; splitting

C3; no C1q or C4

Dense deposits

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121
Q

IgA nephropathy

Presentation, path

A

Recurrent hematuria or proteinuria

Unknown

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122
Q

IgA nephropathy LM FM EM

A

Focal mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis; mesangial widening

IgA+- IgG, IgM and C3 in mesangium

Mesangial and paramesangial dense deposits

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123
Q

What is the most common cause of nephritic syndrome in adults

A

Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis

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124
Q

What is focal segmental glomerulosclerosis

A

Progressive fibrosis involving portions of some glomeruli that leads to increasing functional impairment

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125
Q

What does focal segmental glomerulosclerosis lead to

A

Proteinuria and hematuria even if the initial insult was non glomerular

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126
Q

What causes focal segmental glomerulosclerosis

A

Loss of renal mass from whatever cause (ischemia/infarction, immune mediated fibrosis) and is a result of adaptive changes

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127
Q

What are the adaptive changes that cause focal segmental glomerulosclerosis

A

Loss of renal mass results in hypertrophy of remaining glomeruli so that there is maintence of renal function (compensation)

Podocytes cant grow with the glomeruli, losing filtration barrier and resulting in increases of glomerular blood flow, filtration, and transcapillary pressure (glomerular HTN)
-often associated with systemic HTN

Proteins and cells are allowed to lead out, resulting in macrophage induced fibrosis, causing a reduction in renal mass

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128
Q

How treat focal segmental glomerulosclerosis

A

Renin angiotensin system inhibitors

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129
Q

Most likely diagnosis when an adult has nephrotic syndrome

A

Fsgs

When you see nephrotic syndrome with nephritic syndrome

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130
Q

Tubulointerstitial fibrosis

A

Fibrosis and inflammation of the tubules and interstitial opposed to the glomerulus

There is a stronger correlation between the decline of renal function and the amount of tubulointerstitial fibrosis than with the severity of glomerular injury

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131
Q

What causes tubulointerstitial fibrosis

A

Infarction of tubules, possibly from alterations of hemodynamics in the above condition (fSGS)

Activation of tubule cells and direct injury either from proteinuria or other cytokines

Activated tubules cell express adhesion molecules and elite inflammatory cells that lead to fibrosis

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132
Q

NEPHRITIC syndrome

A

Acute proliferative glomerulonephritis/post streptococcal glomerulonephritis (PSGN)/post infectious glomerulonephritis—all same
*diffuse proliferation of glomerular cells associated with influx (exudation) of leukocytes

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133
Q

What causes nephritic syndrome

A

Immune complexes

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134
Q

NEPHRITIC syndrome exogenous antigen induced

A

Post infectious glomerulonephritis

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135
Q

NEPHRITIC syndrome endogenous antigen induced

A

Nephritis of SE

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136
Q

Pathogenesis nephritic syndrome

A

Post step A (pyogenic) beta hemolytic pharyngitis OR skin infection is the original infection typically 1-4 weeks prior

Distractor-if there is a current complaint of sore throat and dry cough it is not PSGN: PSGN happens 1-4 weeks after an untreated case

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137
Q

What stream a pyogenic beta hemolytic strains are most commonly involved in nephritic syndrome

A

12,4,1 (identified by typing of the M protein of the bacterial cell walls)

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138
Q

Formation of antibody against pyogenic ________ results in immune complex formation in site and deposition

A

Exotoxin B SpeB

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139
Q

SpeB

A

Can directly activate complement
Commonly secreted by nephritogenic strains of streptococci
Has been localized to the hump like deposits in the subepithelial space characteristic of PSGN (post streptococcal glomerulonephritis)

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140
Q

NEPHRITIC syndrome inciting antigens are exogenously ___ from the circulation in subendothelial locations in glomerular capillary walls, leading to in situ formation of immune complexes where they elicit an inflammatory response

A

Planted

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141
Q

Describe immune deposits in nephritic syndrome

A

Hump like and located inthe glomeruli in the subepithelial space

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142
Q

LM nephritic syndrome

A

Enlarged and hypercellularity glomeruli : tubules often contain red cell casts; LM is not entirely specific, use IF and EM
Caused by proliferation of endothelial/mesangial cells and crescent formation in severe cases

Global and diffuse

Leads to obliterated capillary lumens

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143
Q

NEPHRITIC syndrome IF

A

Shows granular deposits of IgG and C3, and sometimes IgM in the mesangium and along the GB<

Immune complex deposits are almost universally present, they are often focal and sparse

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144
Q

NEPHRITIC syndrome EM

A

Discrete, amorphous electron dense deposit on the subepithelial side (which is the antigen antibody complex at the subepithelial cell surface) often having the appearance of humps

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145
Q

NEPHRITIC syndrome clinical course

A

Young child (6-10) with sudden/abrupt onset on malaise, fever, nausea, periorbital edema, mild to moderate HTN, oliguria, proteinuria, dysmorphic RBCs/cast and hematuria (tea colored urine) 1-2 weeks after a strep a infection

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146
Q

Labs nephritic syndrome

A

Elevated ASO titers and low serum complement levels (consumption)

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147
Q

Prognosis nephritic syndrome in kids

A

Good prognosis in kids
95% recover well as Ag-Ab is cleared with fluid/electrolyte therapy

1% develop rapidly progressive glomerulnephritis (bad)

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148
Q

Poor prognosis nephritic syndrome

A

Prolonged and persistent proteinuria/abnormal GFR

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149
Q

Adults nephritic syndrome

A

Suddenly without infection

HTN, edema, elevated BUN

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150
Q

Prognosis nephritic syndrome adults

A

60% will recover quickly and then remaining will have smoldering chronic conditions and can even progress to chronic or rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis

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151
Q

Post infectious glomerulonephritis

A

Mainly strep a,

Bacterial (staphylococcal endocarditis, pneumococcal pneumonia, and meningococcemia), viral (hep b, hep c, mumps, HIV, varicella, and mono), or parasite (toxoplasmosis, malaria)
—->same IF: granular deposits and subepithelial humps
—->post infectious glomerulonephritis due to staphylococcal infections differs by sometimes producing immune deposits containing IgA rather than IgG

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152
Q

Rapidly progressive (crescentic, exudative, extra-capillary) glomerulonephritis (RPcGN, RPGN)

A

VERY SICK

Severe glomerular injury associated with the formation of crescents in most glomeruli (crescenteric glomerulonephritis)

Rapid progression and loss of renal function

Severe oliguria and signs and symptoms of nephritic syndrome

Weill lead to renal failure in weeks to months if untreated

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153
Q

Crescents with RPGN

A

Proliferation of parietal epithelial cells lining the bowman capsule and by infiltrating monocytes and macrophages

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154
Q

RPGN pathogenesis

A

Immune

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155
Q

Type I RPGN

A

Anti-GB< antibodies that cross react with pulmonary alveolar BM as in goodpasture; anti-collagen type IV

Rare

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156
Q

Type I RPGN antigen

A

Alpha3 chain of collagen type IV

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157
Q

Genetics type I RPGN

A

HLA DRB1 (MHC class II)

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158
Q

Treat type I RPGN

A

Plasmapheresis (remove antigen/antibody from the circulation)

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159
Q

Type II RPGN

A

Immune complex as in post infectious, SLE, IgA, nephropathy, or Henolch schloen

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160
Q

Morphology type II RPGN

A

Granular pattern of immune complex formation

Cellular proliferation and crescent formation

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161
Q

Treat type II RPGN

A

Not helped by plasmapheresis, treat the underlying cause

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162
Q

Type II RPGN

A

Pauci immune without associated to anti-GBM complexes or immune complex, but is associated with ANCA that produce plasma of cytoplasmic staining patterns (p-ANCA and c-ANCA) as in wegners

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163
Q

Type II RPGN is associate with what

A

Vasculitis EUS, like granulomatous is with poly angiitis, formerly called wegners granulomatous is, or microscopic angiitis

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164
Q

Diagnosis type II RPGN

A

ANCA

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165
Q

Where is type II RPGN

A

Kidneys (idiopathic)

> 90% of idiopathic cases have c ANCA or pANCA in the sera

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166
Q

All cases of crescenteric glomerulonephritis of the pauci-immune type are manifestations of small vessel vasculitis or polyangiitis, which is limited to glomerular and perhaps peritubular capillaries in cases of idiopathic crescentic glomerulonephritis

A

Ok

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167
Q

Morphology RPN

A

Enlarged and pale kidneys with cortical petechial hemorrhage

Segmental glomerular necrosis next to unaffected areas

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168
Q

Histology RPGN

A

Crescents==proliferation of parietal cells, macrophages, PMN, and fibrin strands between cells, all contained within Bowman’s space

Obliterating the urinary space and compress the glomerular tuft

Activation of coagulation factors implicated in the formation of crescents

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169
Q

EM RPGN

A

Wrinkled and ruptured basement membranes

Ruptures in the GBM allow leukocytes, plasma proteins such as coagulation factors and complement, and inflammatory mediators to reach the urinary space where they trigger crescent formation

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170
Q

IF RPGN

A

Variable pattern depending on
Type 1=linear
Type 2=granular
Type 3=none

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171
Q

Clinical course all types of RPGN

A

Hematuria, red cell cast, proteinuria approaching nephrotic ranges—nephritic syndrome

Variable edema and HTN—nephritic syndrome

Rapidly progressive disease with loss of renal function that is accompanied by oliguria

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172
Q

Clinical course crescenteric glomerulonephritis

A

If they survive the acute episode, usually(more than 90%) progress to chronic glomerulonephritis

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173
Q

Treat RPGN type II

A

II-plasmapheresis, or steroids and cytotoxic drugs (anti inflammation)(poor prognosis)

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174
Q

What are the types of nephritic syndrome

A

Membranous glomerulopathy, minimal change disease, focal glomerulosclerosis

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175
Q

What is nephrotic syndrome

A

Derangement of glomerular capillaries with increased permeability to protein with resultant SEVERE proteinuria

Albumin leaks out along with proteinuria leading to decreased colloid pressure(edema)

Edema (periportal and peripheral) result from the loss of colloid pressure with subsequent ADH/aldosterone fluid retention (because all fluid is in the interstitial it looks like there is fluid depletion) exarcabating the edema

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176
Q

Edema with nephrotic syndrome

A

Soft and pitting

Most marked in the periorbital regions and dependent portions of the body

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177
Q

Why hyperlipidemia/hypercholesterolemia in nephrotic syndrome

A

Liver compensates by increasing protein synthesis; side effect is increase of lipoproteins and cholesterol

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178
Q

Nephrotic syndrome are at an increased risk of __

A

Infection

Staphylococcal and pneumococcal

*loss of immunoglobulins in the urine

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179
Q

Thrombotic and thromboembolic complications in nephrotic syndrome

A

Due to loss of endogenous anticoagulants

Renal vein thrombosis is most often a consequence of this (makes nephrotic syndrome worse) and can cause a varicocele on the left in males

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180
Q

Cause of nephrotic syndrome in US kids less than 17

A

Primary lesion of kidney

*minimal change disease most common in kids , membranous glomerulopathy most common in adults (spike and dome, lumpy) and focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (all ages)

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181
Q

NEPHRITIC syndrome in kids is MCD until proven otherwise. What shouldn’t you do

A

Don’t biopsy-challenge with steroids and see if condition improves bc MCD is exquisitely responsive to steroid therapy

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182
Q

What causes nephritic syndrome in adults

A

Systemic disease (SLE DIABETES AMYLOIDOSIS)

Loss of immunoglobulins int he urine predispose to acute pyogenic infection (staph and strep)

See Robbins 914

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183
Q

Membranous nephropathy

A

Diffuse thickening of the glomerular capillary wall due to accumulation of deposits containing immunoglobulins along the subepithelial side of the basement membrane

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184
Q

Critical concepts membranous nephropathy

A

75% are primary, the rest happen in association with other diseases

Either is idiopathic or is secondary to an immune disease

Does not respond well to corticosteroids

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185
Q

Pathogenesis membranous nephropathy

A

Chronic immune complex deposition disease, espicially IgG4 that activate the complement and MAC complex

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186
Q

Primary membranous nephropathy

A

Idiopathic-MHC susceptibility HLA-DQA1 + nephritogenic antigen (antibodies to a renal autoantigen)

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187
Q

Endogenous antigens primary membranous nephropathy

A

Phospholipase A2 receptor (PLA2R most common**), self nuclear proteins and autoantibodies, neutral endopeptidase

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188
Q

Exogenous antigens membranous nephropathy

A

Antigens that come fro Hep B or treponema

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189
Q

Secondary membranous nephropathy

A

SLE, drugs (penicillamine, captopril, gold, NSAIDS), tumors, metals (mercury), infections (hep C, B, schistosomiasis, malaria), autoimmune (thyroiditis)

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190
Q

Why are penicillamine and gold not used to treat RA

A

Membranous nephropathy

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191
Q

MAC membranous nephropathy

A

C5b-C9
Activated glomerular epithelial and mesangial cells, inducing them to liberate proteases and oxidants, which cause capillary wall injury and increased protein leakage

IgG4==poor activator of classical complement pathway but IgG4 the principal immunoglobulin deposited in cases of primary membranous nephropathy

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192
Q

LM membranous nephropathy

A

Uniform diffuse thickening of basement membrane, thick capillary loops

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193
Q

EM membranous nephropathy

A

Dense deposits in subepithelial side, with the BM forming spikes into the deposit—spike and dome

—spikes will grow out and encompasss the deposit forming domes (silver stain)

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194
Q

What makes up electron dense deposits in membranous nephropathy

A

PLA2R in primary

Unknown in secondary

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195
Q

IF membranous nephropathy

A

Granular pattern of immunoglobulin and complement

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196
Q

With advancement of membranous nephropathy there can be __ ___ and the glomerular can becomes ____

A

Segmental sclerosis

Sclerosis

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197
Q

What can happen to proximal tubules in membranous nephropathy

A

Epithelial cells can contain protein reabsorption droplets and there can be considerable interstitial mononuclear cell inflammation

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198
Q

Clinical membranous nephropathy

A

Insidious onset
Hematuria and mild HTN in 15-35%
Proteinuria is nonselective and dose not respond to corticosteroids
-nonselective proteinuria==higher molecular weight proteins in addition to albumin
-otherwise very similar to minimal change disease

Complete or partial remissions can happen

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199
Q

Eventual sclerosis in membranous nephropathy leds to what lab values

A

Elevated BUN, creatinine, and HTN—ezotemia/uremia

60% of patients will continue to have proteinuria

Can progress sometimes to renal failure, but only after 10-40 years

Circulating antibodies to PLA2 may be a useful biomarker of disease activity

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200
Q

Minimal change disease /lipoid nephrosis, nil disease

A

childhood nephrotic syndrome that is characterized by effaced foot processes on EM in MASSIVE proteinuria with a normal glomerulus on light microscopywith HIGHLY selective proteinuria

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201
Q

Cells of proximal tubules in minimal change disease

A

Laden with lipid and protein (from tubular reabsorption of lipoproteins passing through diseased glomeruli)
-lipid deposition

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202
Q

Why get lipid deposition in proximal tubes with Minaj change disease

A

Lose oncotically active protein (albumin) liver reacts in a compensatory pathway and increases synthesis of lipoproteins; these lipoproteins then lodge themselves in the proximal tubules

Lipids are absorbed and deposited in proximal tubules cells but do not damage the cell ( no necrosis) like bench jones proteins do (necrosis)

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203
Q

Most common cause of nephrotic syndrome in kids

A

Minimal change (206)

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204
Q

Nephrotic syndrome in kids is __ until proven otherwise….don’t biopsy why

A

MCD

Challenge with steroids…it is exquisitely responsive to steroids

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205
Q

If a kid has nephrotic syndrome and not respond to steroids

A

Mixed nephritic/nephrotic syndromes, papillary necrosis (analgesic nephropathy)

Steroid therapy is virtually diagnostic

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206
Q

MCD sometimes follows what

A

Respiratory infection or immunization

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207
Q

Characterization MCD

A

Effaced foot processes (podocytes) on EM with a normal LM glomerulus

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208
Q

Treat MCD

A

Responsive to corticosteroids and remits after puberty

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209
Q

Pathogenesis MCD

A

Unknown

Autoimmune
Post infection even though these changes can be seen in the absence of immune deposition or infection , immunization

Associated with atopic

K\link to Hodgkin lymphoma (presence of Reed-Sternberg cells, which are mature B cells that have become malignant , are usually large, and carry more than one nucleus..non Hodgkin can be derived from B cells or T cells can can arise in the lymph nodes as well as other organs)

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210
Q

NSAIDS MCD

A

Maybe

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211
Q

Ultastructural changed MCD EM

A

Primary visceral epithelial cell injury (podocytopathy) and studies in animal models suggest the loss of glomerular polyanions from defect to the charge barrier)

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212
Q

LM MCD

A

Normal glomerulus without any changes

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213
Q

EM MCD

A

Establishes diagnosis
Principal lesion is in the visceral epithelial cells, which show a uniform and diffuse effacement of foot processes
Visceral epithelial changes are completely reversible after corticosteroid therapy, concomitant remission of the proteinuria
Vacuoles and fused podocytes which are just flattened epithelium

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214
Q

MCD IF

A

Nothing no immune deposition

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215
Q

Clinical MCD

A

Despite massive proteinuria, there is a preservation of renal function without hematuria or hypertension

Nephrotic syndrome, not nephritic syndrome

SELECTIVE PROTEINURIA==mostly albumin (small

Non selective—albumin and high molecular weight proteins

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216
Q

Treat MCD

A

Corticosteroids and although may get resistance, excellent prognosis

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217
Q

Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis

A

Sclerosis of some, but not all glomeruli affecting only part of each affected glomeruli with nephrotic syndrome

Most common cause of nephrotic syndrome in adults in US, espicially black and Hispanic

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218
Q

Types of focal segmental glomerulosclerosis

A

Primary (idiopathic)

Association with other conditions like HIV, heroin addiction, sickle cell and massive obesity

Secondary event event that caused scarring like IgA nephropathy

Loss of renal tissue from congenital abnormalities, acquired cases like reflux nephropathy, or advanced stages of other renal disorder like hypertensive nephropathy

Inherited forms of nephrotic syndrome where disease is caused by mutations that encode the slit diaphragm proteins (pods in, alpha-actinin 4, and transient receptor potential calcium channel-6 TRCPC6)

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219
Q

Five categorizations

A

Primary=diagnosis

Associated with other known disorders

Secondary to antecedent other glomerular syndrome

Adaptive hemodynamics response
-patients who lose a kidney due to trauma or as a donor==traumatic changes in the remaining kidney

Inherited

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220
Q

How does focal segmental glomerulosclerosis differ from minimal change disease

A

Higher incidence of hematuria and HTN
Reduced GFR
Proteinuria is nonselective (high molecular weight proteins along with albumin)
POOR RESPONSE TO CORTICOSTEROIDS
There is 50% of developing ESRD within 10 years—long term prognosis is not excellent

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221
Q

Pathogenesis focal segmental glomerulosclerosis

A

Progression from minimal change with extra epithelial damage and sclerosis under light microscopy

Proteinuria results with subsequent entrapment of plasma proteins, resulting in hyalonisis and sclerosis of affected segments

Circulating factor and genetically determined factor-most likely

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222
Q

Mutations of focal segmental glomerulonephritis: all of which localize to the slit diaphragm and adjacent podocyte cytoskeleton structures

A

Nephrin

Podocin

Alpha actinin 4

TRP6

Apolipoprotein L1

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223
Q

Nephrin

A

genes code for cell adhesion interactions at the diaphragm and mutations in nephron genes cause a collapse of the filtration barrier
-NPHS1, chromosome 19p13

This mutation can lead to congenital nephrotic syndrome of the Finnish type

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224
Q

Podocin

A

NPHS2, chromosome 1q25-q31
AR
Steroid resistant pediatric form

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225
Q

Alpha actinin 4

A

Can be AD causes of FSGS

Insidious in onset with high rate of progression to renal insuffiency

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226
Q

TRP6

A

Mutation associated with adult onset FSGS

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227
Q

Apolipoprotein L1 (APOL1)

A

APOL1, chromosome 22

Increases the risk of FSGS in African Americans

Also associated with increased resistance to trypanosome infection

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228
Q

Renal ablation FSGS

A

After the removal of a diseased or healthy nephrotic segment caused by hypertrophy of the remaining segment

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229
Q

LM FSGS

A

Only a minority of the glomeruli may have the focal and segmental lesions;
Parts of some glomeruli are eosinophilic (hyalinosis) with sclerosis

There is collapse of the capillary loops and hyalinossi int he sclerotic segments, this may occlude the lumen

With time this will spread and lead to global sclerosis

Foam cells are commonly seen

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230
Q

EM FSGF

A

Effacement of podocytes as in minimal change disease. Focal detachment and denudation of the GBM

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231
Q

IF FSGS

A

IgM and C3 in sclerotic areas

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232
Q

Collapsing glomerulosclerosis

A

Morphologically distinct variant that involves retraction/collapse of the entire glomerular tuft, with or without additional FSGS lesions

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233
Q

Characteristic feature of collapsing glomerulosclerosis

A

Proliferation and hypertrophy of glomerular visceral epithelial cells

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234
Q

Causes of collapsing glomerulosclerosis

A

Typically associated with prominent tubular injury with formation of microcysts

Drug toxicities like pamidronate

HIV associated nephropathy-most characteristic lesion

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235
Q

Prognosis collapsing glomerulosclerosis

A

Poor prognosis

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236
Q

Who gets FSGS

A

Adults, kids, usually african American, associated with viral illness HIV HepB and Hep C

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237
Q

FSGS and corticosteroids

A

Nope

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238
Q

Prognosis FSGS

A

Some will end with rapid onset renal failure (2 years) while some may last 10 years; renal transplantation or dialysis in inevitable

Kids better prognosis

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239
Q

HIV and FSGS

A

Nephrotic syndrome and microscopic hematuria

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240
Q

FSGS nephrotic or nephrotic

A

Mostly nephrotic can be mixed

241
Q

Significant;y decreases GFR with azotemia; focal IgM and C3 in mesangial distribution; hypertensive. Which of the following is of most value in terms of the diagnosis in this case

A

Lack of response to steroid therapy and biopsy

242
Q

HIV associated nephropathy

A

Can directly of indirectly cause several renal complications, including acute renal failure or acute interstitial nephritis that is due to treatment of drugs, infections, thrombotic microangiopathies, post infectious glomerulonephritis, and from a severe form of the collapsing variant of FSGS called HIV associated nephropathy

243
Q

Treat HIV associated nephropathy

A

Anti viral

244
Q

Morphology HIV associated nephropathy

A

Focal cystic dilation of tubule segments which are filled with proteinaceous arterial, inflammation and fibrosis

Lots of tubuloreticular inclusions within endothelial cells that are modification of the ER in the cells by circulating IFN-a
——-not found in idiopathic FSGS therefore may be diagnostic for HIV associated nephropathy

245
Q

A 35 year old HIV +ve male present to your SF clinic with nephrotic syndrome and microscopic hematuria. CD4 count >500. He is at most risk for infection from what

A

Strep p

Loss of immunoglobulins in the urine increases susceptibility to staph and strep infection (acute pyogenic )

246
Q

Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis

A

Not a specific disease, but an immune mediated injury due to immune deposition

Mesangial interposition==proliferation of mesangial cells into?

247
Q

Types of membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis MPGN

A

Type I-deposition of IgG and complement

Type II-alternative complement activation is the most important aspect and belongs to a group of C3 glomerulopathies

248
Q

Type I membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis

A

Tends to be a mixed nephrotic/nephrotic

In adults, less common than II

Frequently associated with chronic antigenemia causing immune complex deposition (hep C with cryoglobinemia, chronic immune complex disorders such as SLE, endocarditis, certain malignancies-CLL, lymphomas, melanomas)
-when these morbid conditions are absent, makes MPGN

249
Q

Type II membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (dense deposit)

A

C3 found in the GB

250
Q

Type I and II membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis MPGN

A

Proliferation in the mesangial and capillary loops and can be called mesangiocapillary glomerulonephritis

251
Q

Type I pathogenesis

A

Immune complex deposition and activation of classical and alternative complement pathways
-C3 low in plasma serum bc it gest used up (consumption)

There is mesangial proliferation with involvement of basement membrane

252
Q

LM membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis

A

Hypercellularity of the mesangial and capillaries

GBM is thickened and often shows a double contour or tram track appearance

  • espicially evident in silver or PAS
  • duplication of the basement membrane (splitting) as the result of new basement membrane synthesis in response to subendothelial deposits of immune complexes
  • mesangial interposition

Creascents are present in many cases

253
Q

EM membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis

A

Type I: Discrete subendothelial electron dense deposited (lumen side with the RBC)

Look for silver stain to give a better picture of splitting

254
Q

IF membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis

A

IgG, IgM, and C3 in a granular pattern: early complement components are also present, indicative of immune complex pathogenesis

255
Q

Who gets membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis

A

Adolescents and young adults

256
Q

Manifestation of membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis

A

Nephritic and nephritic component manifested by hematuria or sometimes mild proteinuria

257
Q

Prognosis membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis

A

Slow progressive, unremitting

50% chance of renal failure in 10 years

258
Q

Treat membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis

A

Immune suppression

259
Q

Secondary MPGN

A

Almost always type I: immune complex deposition and activation of classical and alternative complement pathways

260
Q

Who gets secondary MPGN

A

Adults

261
Q

What is secondary MPGN associated with

A

Chronic immune complex disordersL SLE, hep B, hep C with cryoglobulinemia, endocarditis, infected AV shunts, chronic visceral abscesses, HIV, schistomiasis

Alpha 1 antitrypsin defiency

Malignant disease:lymphoid tumors like chronic lymphocytic leukemia which are commonly complicated by development of autoantibodies

262
Q

Dense deposit disease (MPGN type II)

A

Excessive activation of the alternative complement pathway and deposition int he glomerulus

Associated with C3NeF

263
Q

Mutations that cause dense deposit disease

A

70% C3 nephritic factor autoantibodies which bind to C3 convertase and protects it from inactivation

  • promotes persistent C3 activation and hypocomplementemia
  • decreased C3 synthesis by the liver—-> hypocomplementemia

Also associated with mutations in factor H

264
Q

Pathogenesis I dense deposit disease (MPGN type II)

A

Consistently decreased C3 with normal C1 and C4 levels

Decreased factor B and properdin (components of the alternative complement pathway)

C3 and properdin are deposited int he glomerulus, but not IgG

265
Q

Morphology dense deposit

A

Predominantly mesangial proliferative pattern, but can also appear with inflammation and focal crease trim appearance

266
Q

EM dense deposit

A

Permeation of the lamina densa of the GBM by an extremely electron dense ribbon of material-DEFINES IT

267
Q

IF dense deposit

A

C3 is present in irregular granular or linear foci around, not in the dense deposits
-characteristic C3 deposits in the mesangial in circular aggregations (mesangial rings)without IgG
—IgG and components of the classical complement pathway (C1q and C4) are absent
—other C3 glomerulopathies can have the rings, but don’t have the despise deposits

268
Q

Clinical features dense deposits

A

Kids and young adults
Poor prognosis
50% protests to ESRD
Reoccurs in 90% or transplant recipients, but renal failure is much less common in the allograft

269
Q

IgA nephropathy (Berger disease)

A

Primary renal disease (can sometimes be secondary) where IgA deposits are found in the mesangium detected by immunofluorescence with recurring hematuria
MOST COMMON CAUSE OF GLOMERULONEPHRITIS WORLDWIDE

Note: systemic diseases can also cause IgA deposition in the kidneys (henoch-schonlein purpura)

Also called focal proliferative GN

270
Q

IgA nephropathy association

A

With one particular form of IgA (IgA1) where a genetic defect (acquired or hereditary) causes glycolyslation of the hinge region

Certain types of HLA MHC-II subtype, gluten enteropathy, liver disease where there is defective hepatobiliary clearance of polymeric IgA

271
Q

Pathogenesis IgA nephropathy

A

Antigen recognition in mucosal membranes results in formation of IgA and IgA complexes that circulate in the blood; inciting antigen is unclear

Liver decomposes polymeric IgA (usually exists as a dimer in mucosal lumen)
-liver disease can present with IgA deposition and glomerulonephritis

Some polymeric IgA (or IgA-IgG complexes) become trapped in glomerulus leading to complement activation, mesangial proliferation and glomerular injury

The complexes cause activation of alternative complement pathway—C3 is commonly found in deposits, C1q and C4 are absent

272
Q

What is IgA

A

Mucosal defense present in low concentrations in the plasma as a monomer; liver catabolizes the polymer

273
Q

Upregulation of IgA

A

Extra circulating that may lead to IgA nephropathy

274
Q

Morphology IgA nephropathy

A

Microscopic changes are variable but mesangial proliferation/widening, capillary proliferation, or overt cresenteric glomerulonephritis May occur

Healing can lead to focal segmental glomerulosclerosis

275
Q

Diagnose IgA nephropathy

A

Immunofluorescent stains for complement of IgA in the characteristic granular mesangial pattern
-will also see C3 and less IgG and IgM

276
Q

What is the most common nephropathy in the world

A

IgA nephropathy

277
Q

Who gets IgA nephropathy

A

Older kids young adults

278
Q

How do patients present with IgA nephropathy

A

Gross hematuria following an infection of their respiratory of GI tract

30-40% will have microscopic hematuria, with or without proteinuria

5-10% develop acute nephritic syndrome

Bright red urine

Bleeding will last for a few days then come back every few months (recurrent hematuris)

279
Q

Prognosis IgA nephropathy

A

Fairly benign gross morphology, bright red bleeding in urine usually following an URI

280
Q

Prognosis IgA nephropathy

A

Prolonged progression is associated with old age, heavy proteinuria, HTN, and more glomerulosclerosis

281
Q

Hereditary nephritis/Alport syndrome

A

Hematuria with slowly progressing proteinuria and declining renal function

Thin basement membrane lesion==benign clinical course of hematuria with mild to moderate proteinuria and normal renal function

282
Q

Alport syndrome A LP O R T

A

A-Alport

LP-LP is a record, that you listen to, reminds you of DEAFNESS…not present in thin basement membrane lesion

O-ocular..not present in thin basement membrane

R-renal failure..not present in the thin basement membrane lesion

T-thickening of BM and type IV collagen…thin basemen mmebrane lesion==thinning of the GM

283
Q

Alport syndrome

A

Nephritic x linked disorder involving collagen formation characterized by renal failure, auditory disturbances, and eye problems (corneal atrophy, posterior cataracts, lens dislocation)

284
Q

Females with Alport

A

Some hematuria-not severe

285
Q

Males alport

A

Full syndrome and progress to ESRD by 40–worse

286
Q

Pathogenesis of alport

A

Defective in BM as result of defect in type IV collagen synthesis

  • GBM made up of alpha 3,4,5 chains
  • type IV collagen is found on chromosome 2,13, and X inheritance can be autosomal of X linked

Type IV collagens is crucial for function of the GBM, the lens of the eye, and the cochlea

Lack of alpha chains renders these patient immune to good pastures since they lack alpha 3 antigen
—-linked defects of alpha 5 chain of collagen IV to in X linked

287
Q

Morphology alport EM

A

Alternating thickening and thinning glomerular basement membrane with lamination fo the lamina densa, basket weave appearance

Can stain for the alpha chains to look for the disease as affected patients will not show the defective alpha chains. Can look for the alpha 5 chain in the skin

With progression there is glomerulosclerosis, tubular atrophy, and interstitial fibrosis

Irregular thickening of BM, lamination fo lamina densa and foci of rarefaction

288
Q

Most common presenting sign of alport

A

Gross of microscopic hematuriafreuenly accompanied by red cell casts
—-proteinuria may develop, and nephrotic syndrome rarely develops

289
Q

Onset of alport

A

Birth, but symptoms occcur later in life

Early signs 15-20 years
With auditory and vision problems??

290
Q

What is alport associated with

A

Vision prob and auditory prob

291
Q

Basement membrane disease/benign familial hematuria

A

Common, asymptomatic hematuria, discovered by routine urinalysis with mild of moderate proteinuria

292
Q

Prognosis thin basement membrane disease

A

Renal function normal fo excellent prognosis

293
Q

How diagnose thin basement membrane disease

A

EM see diffuse thinning of glomerular basement membrane-hence thin basement membrane!

294
Q

What causes thin basement membrane disease

A

Defect in type IV collagen formation

A-5 type IV collagen is present and there are no ocular or auditory lesions—distinct from alport

295
Q

How does thin basement membrane differ from alport and IgA nephropathy

A

A-5 type IV collagen is normal and no ocular or auditory lesions

No IgA immune deposition in mesngium

296
Q

Prognosis thin basement membrane diseseae

A

Good with maintence of normal renal function throughout life

297
Q

Chronic glomerulonephritis

A

End point of all nephrotic and nephritic syndromes

This is the end point of all diseases discussed here, occuing at varying rates dependent on primary disease or arise suddenly with no history of acute glomerulonephritis

298
Q

What happens to kidney in chronic glomerulonephritis

A

Symmetrically contracted and have diffuse granular cortical surfaces

Cortex is thinned with an increase in peri pelvic fat

Extensive hyalinization and fibrosis (obliteration) of the glomeruli, demonstrated by large amount of collagen on a trachoma stain

299
Q

Bc __ is often concomitant with chronic renal failure, arterial sclerosis may be present as well-arterolnephrosclerosis?

A

HTN

300
Q

Clinical chronic glomerulonephritis

A

patients present with nonspecific complaints of loss of appetites, anemia, vomiting, or weakness

Chronic renal failure leads to uremia with characteristic changes (pericarditis/secondary hyperparathyroidism)

Edema

301
Q

Prognosis chronic glomerulonephritis

A

Progressive renal failure, often with HTN, eventual edema, and, without dialysis or Renault ransplant , death

302
Q

Lupus

A

Forms antibody-antigen complexes that deposit in the glomerular filtration barrier …macrophage activation leads to injury and eventual fibrosis of the glomerulus and even some vasculitides

303
Q

Complication of lupus

A

Renal failure-hematuris, acute nephritis, nephrotic syndrome, acute and chronic renal failure, and HTN

304
Q

LUPUS appearance

A

Wire loop appearance -systemic LOOPus

305
Q

What are the 6 patterns of SLE

A

ClassI-Class VI

306
Q

Class I SLE

A

Minimal mesangial lupus nephritis

Immune comple deposition in the mesangium

Seen on EM or IF only-no structural changes identified by light microscopy-a lot like MCD

Least common

307
Q

Class II SLE

A

Mesangial proliferative lupus nephritis

308
Q

CLASS III SLE

A

FOCAL LUPUS NEPHRITIS
-DEFINED BY INVOLVEMENT OF <50% of all glomeruli

Segmental or global involvement of the glomerulus

Affected glomeruli-swelling and proliferation of endothelial and mesangial cells associated with leukocyte accumulation, capillary ecrosis, and hyaline thrombi; also often extracapillary proliferation associated with focal necrosis and crescent formation

309
Q

Presentation class II SLE

A

Mild hematuris and proteinuria to acute renal insuffiency

Red cell casts in urine common in active disease

310
Q

Class IV SLE

A

Most common and severe

> 50% of all glomeruli (diffuse)

Segmental or global involvement of the glomerulus

311
Q

Morph class IV SLE

A

Affected glomeruli==proliferation of endothelial, mesangial, and epithelial cells_> lateral crescents that fill Bowman’s space

Subendothelial immune complex deposits may create a circumferential thickening of the capillary wall, forming WIRE LOOPS streucturs on LM

312
Q

Clinical class IV SLE

A

Hematuria, proteinuria,HTN, mild to severe renal insuffiency

313
Q

Class V SLE

A

Membranous lupus nephritis

Diffuse thickening of the capillary walls due to deposition of subepithelial immune complexes usually accompanies by increased production of basement membrane like material

Severe proteinuria or nephrotic syndrome

314
Q

Class VI SLE

A

Advanced sclerosing lupus nephritis
Sclerosis of more than 90% of glomeruli

End stage renal disease

315
Q

Hemochromatosis Schonlein Purpura

A

Childhood syndrome with skin lesions, abdominal pain, intestinal bleeding, arthralgias, and renal abnormalities in 1/3

Probably related to IgA nephropathy

316
Q

Renal manifestations henoch-schonlein purpura

A

Hematuria, nephritis syndrome, nephrotic syndrome, or some combination

317
Q

Associations of henoch-schonlein purpura

A

Atopy

URI

318
Q

Difference between henoch schonlein purpura and burgers (IgA nephropathy)

A

HSP is systemic and burgers is localized

319
Q

Morphology henoch schonlein purpura

A

Renal lesions vary from mild focal or diffuse mesangial proliferation to endocapillary proliferation to crescentic glomerulonephritis

320
Q

IF henoch schonlein purpura

A

Diagnosis is made by IdA is deposited in the renal mesangium , sometimes C3 and IgG

  • very similar to IgA
  • deposits can sometimes extend into the capillary loops
  • pathognomonic feature by IF is the deposition of IgA, sometimes with IgG and C3 in the mesangial region, sometimes with deposits extending to the capillary loops
321
Q

Presntation henoch schonlein purpura

A

Pruritis skin rashes on extensor surfaces of arms and legs and butt

These lesions consist of subepidermal hemorrhages and a necrotising vasculitis involving the small vessels of the dermis

Onset 3-8 with good prognosis unless ominous clinical signs (diffuse lesions, crescents, severe prolonged nephrotic syndrome)

322
Q

Prognosis henoch schonlein purpura

A

3-8 years good! Unless ominous clinical signs (diffuse lesions, creascents, or severe prolonged nephrotic syndrome)

323
Q

Glomerulonephritis associated with bacterial endocarditis and other systemic infections occurs with what infections

A

Rheumatic fever, endocarditis, and infected AV shunts—stsaphylococcus aureus

324
Q

Morphology glomerulonephritis associated with bacterial endocarditis and other systemic infections

A

Circulating antigens cause immune deposition and nephritis

325
Q

Clinical glomerulonephritis associated with bacterial endocarditis and other systemic infections

A

Range from mild to full blown RPGN

Chronic cases can have a MPGN

326
Q

Diabetic nephropathy

A

Diffuse nodular sclerosis

Leading cause of chronic kidney failure in the US

In chapter 24

327
Q

Fibrillation glomerulonephritis characteristic

A

Fibrillation deposits in the mesangium and glomerular capillary walls

Looks like amyloid fibrils on histology, but do not stain with Congo red

328
Q

Morphology fibrillation glomerulonephritis

A

Selective deposition of polyclonal IgG, IgK, Igdelta light chains, and C3 on IF

329
Q

Presentation fibrillation glomerulonephritis

A

Nephrotic syndrome, hematuria (nephritic syndrome), and progressive renal insuffiency—mixed nephrotic/nephritic

  • recurs after transplants
  • unknown etiology
330
Q

Essential mixed cryoglobulinemia

A

IgG-IgM complexes (cryoglobulinemia) induce cutaneous vasculitis, synovitis, and a proliferative glomerulonephritis (typically MPGN type I)

331
Q

What is essential mixed cryoglobinemia associated with

A

Hep C that goes on to MPGN type I

332
Q

Acute tubular injury/necrosis

A

Clinicopathologic finding characterized morphologically by damage to tubular epithelial cells and clinically by an acutely dismissed renal function—necrosis is not always preset

Most common form of acute kidney injury/renal failure

333
Q

Is acute tubular injury irreversible or reversible

A

REVERSIBLE

-patchiness of tubular necrosis and maintence of theintegrity of the basement membrane along many segments allow repair and recover in the precipitation cause is removed

334
Q

Two types of acute tubular injury

A

Ischemic (trauma, sepsis, shock)

Nephrotoxic (from exogenous agents like gentamicin, contrast, heavy metals, or solvents

335
Q

Why does ATI present with cases of material in the urine

A

Hemolytic or muscle injuries can release hemoglobin or myoglobin that can injure the kidneys

336
Q

Pathogenesis I acute tubular injury

A
  1. Tubular injury and

2. Persistent and severe disturbances in blood flow

337
Q

Pathogenesis ATI

A

Acute, severe loss of blood flow or obstruction, usually associated with trauma; can also be caused by toxins that is associated with tubular injury

Tubular epithelial cells have a high metabolic demand (constant massive resorption and NaK ATPase use)

Ischemic poisoned cells lose cell polarity due to redistribution of membrane proteins from basolateral->luminal aspect

Abnormal ion transport across the cells->increasing distal sodium delivery->vasoconstriction via tubuloglomerular feedback

Ischemic cells detach from the BM->luminal obstruction->increase Bowman’s hydrostatic pressure ->decreasing GFR

The filtrate int he lumen of the damaged tubules can lead back into the interstitium and lead to edema and more tubular damage

338
Q

Hemodynamics alterations that cause reduced GFR

A

Intrarenal vasoconstriction_>reduced GFR and reduced O2 delivery to the functionally important tubules int he outer medulla (thick ascending limb and straight segment of the proximal tubule)

339
Q

Repairing in acute tubular injury/necrosis

A

Some repair and healing can occur once the offending agent is removed as long as the surrounding cells are still able to proliferate and differentiate

340
Q

Morphology ATI, which don’t correspond to severity!

A

Focal tubular epithelial cell necrosis and BM eruption with large skip areas of unaffected tubule

Rupture of BM (tubulorrhexis) and occlusion of tubular lumen by casts

Focal, nonspecific necrosis espicially at the straight portion of the proximal tubule and the thick ascending limb

Eosinophilic hyaline and pigmented granular casts in DT and CD
-casts contain mostly Tamm-Horsfall protein (urinary glycoproteins normally secreted by the cells of the ascending thick limb and DT)

Interstitial edema and accumulation of WBC in distal vasa recta

Epithelial regeneration -flattened epithelial cells with hyperchromatic nuclei and mitosis figures

341
Q

Causes of AKI

A

Rhabdomyloysis follwing crush injuries or any condition that breaks down muscle (cocain, statins, ciclosporin, alcoholism)
-myoglobin is released and is directly nephrotoxic

Aminoglycosides (gentamycin)-directly nephrotoxic and cause in 15% of patients

Mercuric chloride leads to injured cells with large acidophilus inclusions that can become calcified

Carbone tetrachloride can lead to lipid accumulation in cells followed by necrosis

Displaying and ciclosporin and other chemotherapeutic agents

Contrast dye is hyperosmolar and in dehydrated ppl can lead to nephrotoxicity in patients with already diminished kidney function (DM)

Crystal deposition from either tumor lysis syndrome or from the ingestion of ethylene glycol (which forms oxalate and leads to calcium oxalate stons0
-BALLOONING OF PCT ISS ETHYLENE GLYCOL

342
Q

Aminoglycosides are nephrotoxic..so who do we use them in

A

Life treating gram negative sepsis

Pyelonephritis, coadminstered with fluoroquinolones

343
Q

Clinical AKI

A

Repair and resolution so give supportive care

NOT associated with hematuris

Three phases-initiation, maintence, recovery

344
Q

Initiation phase AKI

A

Short period during which the nephrotoxic insult has not yet caused acute renal failure

Slight rise in BUN and decrease in urine output
Explained by a transient decrease in blood flow and declining GFR

345
Q

Maintence phase AKI

A

Sustained decreases in urine output (oliguria), salt and water overload, rising BUN concentrations, hyperkalemia (->cardiac arrhythmia, metabolic acidosis) and other manifestations or uremia

With proper management patient will pull through

346
Q

Recover phase AKI

A

Renal function begins to improve rapidly with resolution in a few weeks-initial polyuria as water balance is restored (excess fluid that got jammed up is now allowed to exit)

Beware of hypokalemia
Increased risk of infection
Most patients fully recover if make it here

347
Q

Diagnosis ATN

A

Dirty worn granular casts, also called “renal failure casts”

348
Q

Tubulointerstitial nephritis

A

A group of renal disases caused by inflammatory injuries

Insidious in onset that are manifest by azotemia

349
Q

What is the difference between acute and chronic tubulointerstitial nephritis

A

Acute-rapid clinical onset, interstitial edema, and WBC infiltration of the interstitium and tubules with tubular injury

Chronic-infiltration with mostly mononuclear WBCs, lots of interstitial fibrosis, and lots of tubular atrophy

350
Q

Difference between tubulointerstitial nephritis and glomerular disease

A

Absence of nephritic and nephrotic syndrome

Presence of defects in tubular function which can present as inability to concentrate urine and defects in absorption/secretion that can lead to polyuria and metabolic acidosis

351
Q

Pyelonephritis and UTI cause what

A

Tubulointerstitial nephritis

352
Q

Most common disease of the kidney

A

UTI-pyelonephritis

353
Q

What does pyelonephritis mean

A

Kidney-nephritis

Pyramids-pyelo

Bladder-cystitis

354
Q

Acute vs chronic pyelonephritis

A

Acute-cause by bacterial infection but can have a complex etiology

Chronic-dominated by bacterial infection, but can have a complex etiology

355
Q

Vesicoureteral reflux or obstruction may lead to __ episodes of acute pyelonephritis

A

Recurrent

356
Q

Bacterial pathogenesis of pyelonephritis

A

Gram negative bacteria via endogenous spread from enteric/coliform organisms (e coli, proteus, klebsiella, enterobacter)

Mycobacterium can cause caseating granulomatous inflammation, while fungal infections are non caseating

Can spread hematogenous lh or through ascending infection from a lower UTI (common)

357
Q

Viral pyelonephritis

A

Polyomavirus, CMV, adenovirus if the person is immunocompromised

358
Q

Pathology ascending infection pyelonephritis

A

Begins with colonization of the urethra (introitus) by coliform bacteria

Entrance to bladder is acheived via catheterization (males) or ascent through small urethra (women)

Stasis of urine will make it easier for bacteria to ascend

Vesicourectal reflux (VUR) or intrarenal reflux

359
Q

Vesicoureteral refluc (VUR)

A

Allows bacteria to gain access to ureters, while stasis makes it easier

360
Q

Causes of VUR

A

Congenital-malformed or incompetent valve(posterior urethral valves are a congenital abnormality)

Acquired-atopy of the bladder

361
Q

Absence of VUR

A

Localized to the bladder (lower UTI-cystitis and urethritis, no pyelonephritis)

362
Q

Intrarenal reflux

A

Infected bladder urine can be propelled up to the renal pelvis and deep into the renal parenchyma through open ducts at the tops of the papillae

  • Most common in the upper and lower poles of the kidney
  • occurs with each contraction of the bladder, urine exiting the urethra and ureters, pushing infection up (espicially with utflow obstruction )
363
Q

Acute pyelonephritis hallmark

A

Patchy interstitial suppurative inflammation (focal abscesses or large wedge like areas), intratubular WBC aggregates (WBC casts on urinalysis) and tubular necrosis

364
Q

Acute pyelonephritis effects the __ poles more than the __ poles

A

Upper and lower

Middle

365
Q

What are the three complications of acute pyelonephritis

A

Papillary necrosis

Pyonephrosis

Perinephric abscess

366
Q

Papillary necrosis

A

Seen in diabetics, sickle cell disease, and those with urinary tract obstruction

  • typically bilateral
  • distal pyramid grey white to yellow necrosis (ischemic coagulative)
  • preservation of outlines of tubules with WBCs limited to the preserved and destroyed tissue
  • superimposition of papillary necrosis with acute pyelonephritis->acute renal failure
367
Q

Pyonephrosis

A

Seen when there is a total or almost complete obstruction, particularly when it is high in the urinary tract
-severe infection that totally concludes the lumen and outflow with pus that fills the renal pelvis, calicoes, and ureter

368
Q

Perinephric abscess

A

Where the suppurative inflammation extends through the renal capsule into the perinephric tissue

369
Q

After the acute phase of acute pyelonephritis we get healing. What does this look like

A

Neutrophilic infiltrate replaced by macrophages, plasma cells and lymphocytes

Inflammatory foci replaced by irregular scars (characterized microscopically by tubular atrophy, interstitial fibrosis, and a lymphocytic infiltrate in a patchy jigsaw pattern with intervening preserved parenchyma

370
Q

Pyelonephritis scar

A

Almost always associated with inflammation, fibrosis, and deformation of the underlying calyx and pelvis

371
Q

What is acute pyelonephritis associated with

A

UTI, VUR< urinary tract instrumentation (catheters), pregnancy, and DM (increased susceptibility to infection+neurogenic bladder dysfunction+more frequent instrumentation)

PREGNANCY!!

Preexisting renal lesions that can lead to obstruction

372
Q

Who gets acute pyelonephritis

A

<1 and >40 males

Under 1-congenital
Over40-catheterization and prostate obstruction

Women in adult ages more common bc short urethra

373
Q

Signs and symptoms of acute pyelonephritis

A

Dysuria/frequency with sudden onset of pain in the costovertebral angle (flank pain)

  • systemic evidence of infection (fever, malaise
  • localized onset of pain at the costovertebral angle
  • indications of bladder and urethral irritation==dysuria, frequency, and urgency
  • pyuria-leukocytes in urine
374
Q

Does pyuria differentiate between uppper and lower UTI

A

No

375
Q

WBC casts in urine indicate what

A

Renal involvement—casts are formed only in tubules

376
Q

Culture in pyelonephritis

A

Pathogens

377
Q

Urine n pyelonephritis

A

WBC (casts)

378
Q

Treat pyelonephritis

A

Antibiotics against the cultured pathogen

Start gram -

379
Q

What happens if pyelonephritis bug lives for years like indiabetics or immunosuppression, then there can be

A

Superimposed papillary necrosis and acute renal failure

380
Q

Polyomavirus nephropathy

A

Reactivation of latent virus

Seen in post transplant patients who are immunosuppressed

381
Q

Characterization polyomavirus nephropathy

A

Infection of tubular epithelial cell nuclei

382
Q

LM polyomavirus nephropathy

A

Nuclear enlargement and intranuclear inclusions (viral cytoplasmic effect)

383
Q

EM polyomavirus nephropathy

A

Inclusions are arrayed in crystalline like lattices

384
Q

Chronic pyelonephritis and refluc nephropathy

A

Chronic pyelonephritis==chronic tubulointerstitial inflammation and scarring involving the calyces and pelvis
-only chronic pyelonephritis and analgesic nephropathy impact the calyces

385
Q

Two forms of chronic pyelonephritis

A

Reflux nephropathy and chronic obstructive pyelonephritis

386
Q

Morphology chronic pyelonephritis

A

Tubulointerstitial inflammation causes discrete, corticomedullary scares overlying dilated, blunted and deformed calyces

387
Q

Reflux nephropathy

A

Most common pyelonephritis scarring

388
Q

Who gets reflux nephropathy

A

Early in childhood from superimposition of UTI on congenital vesicoureteral refluc and intrarenal reflux

389
Q

VUR and reflux nephropathy

A

VUR may be unilateral or bilateral->scarring and atrophy of one or both kidneys—>renal insuffiency

VUR can cause renal damage in the absence of infection (sterile refluc) when obstruction is severe

390
Q

Chronic obstructive pyelonephritis

A

Obstructions predispose to infections

The recurring inflammation can lead to scarring and chronic pyelonephritis

Defective posterior urethral valves is bilateral

Calculi and unilateral obstructions of the ureter are unilateral

391
Q

Morphology chronic pyelonephritis and refluc nephropathy

A

Irregular scarring(differs from chronic glomerulonephritis)

Coarse, discrete corticomedullary scars overlying dilated, blunted, or deformed calyces and flattening of the papillae
-SCARS ARE MOST COMMON IN THE UPPER AND LOWER POLES

Tubules atrophy in some areas and hypertrophy/dilation in others

Sclerosis of arteries in affected regions

Dilated, flattened epithelium filled with thyroid colloid (thyroidization)==chronic pyelonephritis

Carrying degrees of chronic interstitial inflammation and fibrosis in the cortex and medulla

Arcuate and interlobular vessels demonstrate obliterating intimacy sclerosis inthe scarred areas

With HTN, hyaline arteriolosclerosis is seen in the entire kidney

Glomeruli typically appear, except in advanced cases with proteinuria there is focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS)

392
Q

Presentation chronic pyelonephritis and reflux nephropathy

A

Back/flank pain, fever, pyuria, and bacteremia

With reflux can be insidious onset without symptoms so it is found late

Patients have asymmetrically contracted kidneys with course scares

393
Q

Why do people with chronic pyelonephritis and reflux nephropathy get medical attention late in disease

A

Onset is so slow

394
Q

What is the major cause of kidney destruction in kids with severe lower urinary tract abnormalities

A

chronic pyelonephritis and reflux nephropathy

*reflux nephropathy is often discovered in kids when the cause of HTN is investigated

395
Q

FSGS with chronic pyelonephritis and reflux nephropathy

A

Possible with increased scarring!
Proteinuria is a poor prognostic finding with progression to ESRD
-chronic pyelonephritis is a cause of chronic renal failure

396
Q

Morphology point chronic pyelonephritis and reflux nephropathy

A

Dilated renal calyces and pelvises

Only chronic pyelonephritis and analgesic nephropathy effect the calyces and pelvises

397
Q

Xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis

A

Rare form of chronic pyelonephritis that is characterized by foam cells mixed with plasma cells, giant cells, and other WBC

398
Q

What is xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis associated with

A

Proteus infections and obstruction

399
Q

Morphology xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis

A

Lesions can sometimes produce large, yellow orange nodules that can grossly look like renal cell carcinoma

400
Q

Acute tubulointerstitial nephritis

A

Immune mediated reaction (hypersensitivity type I and IV) to a variable number of drugs resulting in tubulitis and acute renal failure

It is the second most common cause of acute kidney injury after pyelonephritis

401
Q

Is tubulointerstitial nephritis caused by drugs (allergic nephritis) dose dependent

A

No..related to some immune mechanism (IgE type I or T cell type IV DTH)

402
Q

How do drugs cause tubulointerstital nephritis

A

Drugs act as a hapten until concentrated in the tubules for excretion in urine whereby activation of IgE and T/B/Plasma cells int he localized area

403
Q

Morphology allergic nephritis

A

Pronounced edema in the interstitium

Inflammation may be greater int he medulla where the agent is more concentrated

Eosinophilsneutrophils are present in large numbers

Granulomas may b present that are non necrotizing, typically due to methicillin and thiazides

Various stages of tubular necrosis and healing

Glomeruli are normal except in some cases with NSAIDS

404
Q

Clinical presentation allergic nephritis

A

Fever, rash, eosinophilia, and acute renal failure (increased serum creatinine and oliguria) espicially in older patients 2-40 (average 15 days after exposure to offending agent

Sometimes papillary necrosis with gross hematuria due to ischemia from compression of small vessels or renal colic due toobstruction of the ureter

405
Q

What causes allergic nephritis

A

NSAIDS, synthetic penicillins (methicillin, ampicillin), other synthetic antibiotics (rifampin), diuretic (thiazide), allopurinol, and cimetidine

406
Q

How treat allergic nephritis

A

Remove drug leads to recover and healing

407
Q

Analgesic nephropathy

A

Chronic tubulointerstitial nephritis caused by phenacetin containing analgesics

Incidence is way down bc we removed phenacetin from most countries

408
Q

What patients with analgesic nephropathy more likely to develop

A

Urothelial carcinoma of renal pelvis

409
Q

Nephropathy associated with NSAIDS

A

Uncommon, including COX2 selective inhibitors bc kidneys express COX1 and 2

410
Q

What can nephropathy associated with NSAIDS cause

A

AKI-from ischemia due to vasoconstriction from loss of vasodilation prostaglandins (afferent ). Usually with another volume reducing condition

Acute hypersensitivity interstitial nephritis

Acute interstitial nephritis and minimal change disease: there is injury to both the interstitium/glom and the podocytes to cause renal failure and the nephrotic syndrome

Membranous nephropathy: occurs with the nephritic syndrome

411
Q

Irate nephropathy

A

Due to the precipitation of uric acid crystals int he renal tubules, espicially in the CD

Leads to an obstruction of the nephrons and can develop into acute renal failure

The crystal formation is enhanced by the acid nature of the Collecting tubules

412
Q

Who gets urate nephropathy

A

Patients with leukemia’s and lymphomas that get chemo as a result of tumor lysis syndrome whereby lots of nucleic acids are released that are then converted into uric acid

413
Q

What is chronic urate nephropathy

A

Gout

414
Q

Who gets gout

A

Some patients with chronic hyperuricemia

415
Q

What happens in gout

A

URIc acid crystals develop in the distal tubules, collecting ducts and the interstitium—forms distinct bore fringe NT needle like crystals which causes there to be a mononuclear response with foreign body giant cells (tophus)

416
Q

What does gout lead to

A

Cortical atrophy and scarring

417
Q

What is gout associated with

A

Lead exposure

418
Q

Nephrolithiasis(uric acid stones) is in 22% of people with __and 42% of patients with ___ ___

A

Gout

Secondary hyperuricemia

419
Q

Hypercalcemia and nephrocalcinosis

A

Disorders that involve hypercalcemia (hyperparathyroidism, multiple myeloma, VD intoxication, metastatic cancer, too much milk) can lead to formation of Ca stones and deposition of Ca in the kidney (nephrocalcinosis)

420
Q

What does lots of calcinosis lead to

A

Chronic tubulointerstitial disease and renal insuffiency

421
Q

What is the earliest functional defect of hypercalcemia and nephrocalcinosis

A

Inability to concentrate the urine, but there can also be tubular acidosis and salt losing nephritis

422
Q

Acute phosphate nephropathy

A

Lots of accumulation of phosphate can occur in patients that consume lots of oral phosphate solutions in preparation for colonoscopy

  • patients are not hypercalcemic
  • excess phosphate load causes marked precipitation of calcium phosphate->presents as renal insuffiency several weeks later

Patients with acute and reversible injury typically recover partial renal function

423
Q

Light chain cast nephropathy (myeloma kidney)

A

Most of the kidney damage is restricted to the tubulointerstitial part and is due to the sequels of the tumor like hypercalcemia or from the chemo/radiation therapy

424
Q

Light chain cast nephropathy-bence Jones proteinuria and cast nephropathy

A

Due to light chain proteinuria as the bence-jones proteins (Ig light chains) are toxic to the epithelial cell and bc they form complexes with tamm horsfall proteins under acidic conditions to cause tubular obstruction and characteristic inflammation

Occurs in 70% of patients with multiple myeloma
-presence of significant non light chain proteinuria suggests AL amyloidosis or light chain deposition disease

425
Q

Amyloidosis

A

The AL type with lambda light chains occurs in 6-24% of patients with myeloma

426
Q

Light chain deposition disease

A

The kappa type light chains can deposit in the GBMs and mesangium in non fibrillation forms, causing glomerulopathy

Also deposits in the tubular B< to cause tubulointerstitial nephritis

427
Q

Morphology light chain

A

Bence jones tubular casts appear pink blue amorphous masses that are sometimes concentrically laminated and fractured

These masses then expand and fill the tubular lumen

Some casts are surrounded by multi nucleate giant cells

The adjacent interstitium shows inflammation reaction

428
Q

Bile cast nephropathy

A

Hepatorenal syndrome==impairment of renal function in patients with acute or chronic liver disease with advanced liver failure

  • serum bilirubin UP—-bile cast formation
  • reversibility of the renal injury depends on the severity and duration of the liver dysfunction
429
Q

Morphology Chile cast nephropathy

A

Bile cast formation in the kidneys (cholemic nephrosis) in the distal nephron segments that can extend to the proximal segments

430
Q

What does bile cast nephropathy lead to

A

Direct toxicity effects and obstruction of the involved nephron
-similar pattern of injury to that of myeloma protein or myoglobin casts

431
Q

Nephrosclerosis

A

Sclerosis of the renal arterioles and small arteries associated with aging and HTN

Affected vessels have thickened walls/narrowed lumens—>focal parenchymal ischemia

Sclerosis from medial and intimacy thickening that caused ischemia

Hyaline deposition from extravasation of plasma proteins through injured epithelium

432
Q

Morphology nephrosclerosis

A

Hyalinized arterioles with typical arteriolar changes in HTN

Kidneys are normal to small with a fine, even granularity resembling grain leather
-loss of mass is due mainly to cortical scarring and shrinking

Microscopic subscapular scars with sclerotic glomeruli alternate with preserved parenchyma

Fibropastic hyperplasia: interlobar and arcuate arteries show medial hypertrophy, duplication of the internal elastic lamina, and increased myofibroblasts tissue in the intima—>luminal stenosis

Due to narrowing lumen there is patchy ischemic atrophy with tubular atrophy and interstitial fibrosis with glomerular alterations (GBM collapse, collagen deposition in bowman, periglomerular fibrosis and total sclerosis)

433
Q

Who gets nephrosclerosis

A

Blacks, old ppl, diabetics

Ppl with DM and HTN

434
Q

Clinical presentation nephrosclerosis

A

Usually inconspicuous but proteinuria, decreased GFR and an increased risk towards chronic renal failure do exist i it progresses onto malignant HTN

435
Q

Malignant HTN nephrosclerosis

A

Renal disease with typical arterial changes associated with malignant or accelerated HTN

436
Q

Pathogenesis malignant HTNnephrosclerosis

A

Initial insult from vascular damage to the kidneys from a wide variety of etiologies
-extreme bp=endothelial cell damage, increased permeability to fibrinogen and other plasma proteins, focal death of cells ofthe vascular wall, and platelet activation ->fibrinoid necrosis->intravascular thrombosis

Hyperplastic changes (onion skinning)results from contemporary changes

Kidney becomes ischemic

Ischemia results in activation of the RAAS and exacerbation of HTN
-increased plasma levels of renin->increased HTN

Result is a vicious cycle leadin to malignant arteriosclerosis

437
Q

Morphology malignant hypertension nephrosclerosis

A

Petechial hemorrhage on cortical surface from rupture of arterioles of glomerular capillaries
-FLEA BITTEN APPEARANCE

Fibrinoid necrosis of arterioles=smudgy eosinophilic appearance due to fibrin deposition
-none to minimal inflammation;glomerular capillaries can thrombose

Onion skinning (hyperplastic arteriolitis)=concentric duplication of the basement membrane
-correlated with renal failure
438
Q

Who gets malignant HTN nephrosclerosis

A

Black men

Ppl with HTN

439
Q

Presentation malignant HTN nephrosclerosis

A

Systolic>200 diastolic >120 mmHg, papilledema, retinal hemorrhages, encephalopathy, cardiovascular abnormalitis, and renal failure

Early symptoms are due to increased intracranial pressure: headache, nausea, vomiting, vision problems (scotomas)

May be HTN crises with LOC and maybe convulsions

Proteinuria, maybe hematuria presents at onset with preservation of renal function

Chronic condition results in total renal failure and uremic death

440
Q

Treat malignant HTN nephrosclerosis

A

Medical emergency requiring aggressive and prompt antihypertensive therapy to prevent irreversible renal injury

441
Q

Unilateral renal artery stenosis

A

Old diabetic men

  • responsible for 2-5% of HTN cases, curable by surgery
  • HTN secondary to renal artery stenosis is caused by increased production of renin from the ischemic kidney

Second most common cause of stenosis is from fibromuscular dysplasia of the renal artery where there is fibromuscular thickening of the artery
-more common in 20-30 women

442
Q

What causes unilateral renal artery stenosis

A

CV changes (atheromaous plaques, particularly at the origin of the renal artery) that lead to a decreased renal blood flow and elaboration of ANGII via RAAS from the ischemic kidney (elevated serum renin levels)

443
Q

Treat unilateral renal artery stenosis

A

ACE-I or ARB and surgery

444
Q

Morphology unilateral renal artery stenosis

A

Plaque is concentrically placed

There is often superimposed thrombosis

Ischemic kidney is smaller with diffuse ischemic atrophy, crowded glomeruli, atrophic tubules, interstitial fibrosis, and focal inflammation

String of beads**

The arterioles in the ischemic kidney are typically protected from the HTN and only show mild arteriosclerosis while the other contralateral, nonischemic kidney is less protected and will show more severe arteriosclerosis

445
Q

Presentation unilateral renal artery stenosis

A

Patients look like they have essential HTN

Bruit can be heard on the affected kidney

Elevated plasma renin, shows a response to ACE inhibitor

Arteriography is needed to find the lesion and surgery is needed for the cure

446
Q

Thrombotic microangiopathies=HUS/TTP

A

Group of overlapping clinical manifestations

Variety of insults leads to excessive activation of platelets that deposit in small vessels, including the kidneys

447
Q

Why do patients with thrombotic microangiopathies have thrombocytopenia and microangiopathic hemolytic anemia

A

Consumption of platelets also leads to thrombocytopenia that can shear RBCs and lead to microangiopathic hemolytic anemia

-fragmented red cell forms=evidence of hemolysis-schistocytes

Thrombi can cause microvascular occlusions leading to tissue ischemia and organ dysfunction

448
Q

TPP thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura

A

Will do plasmapheresis: good pasture, TPP, hyperviscousity syndrome, lupus cerebri this,

449
Q

HUS hemolytic uremia syndrome

A

Will not do plasmapharesis

450
Q

2 major triggers for HUS and TPP

A

HUS endothelial injury

TPP excessive platelet aggregation

451
Q

Endothelial injury causing HUS pathogenesis

A

Typical Cause is shiga like toxin (EHEC>shigella)

Inherited forms of atypical HUS-inappropriate activation of complement

The injury to the endothelial causes there to be platelet aggregation and thrombosis within microvascular beds

  • reduced endothelial production of PGI2 and NO->platelet aggregation
  • increased production of endothelin1->vasoconstriction (exacerbates hypoperfusion)
452
Q

TPP platelet aggregation pathogenesis

A

Due to large amounts of vWF from a defiency of ADAMTS13 (most often from auto-antibodies to it)

453
Q

Causes of typical (childhood, epidemic, diarrhea +, classic)) HUS

A

E. coli hamburgers (O157:H7) containing shiga like toxin
-raw milk and person to person

Trigger-shiga like toxin induced endothelial injury

Toxin causes increase in adhesion mo;Eccles of epithelium and decreased NO synthesis

454
Q

Who gets typical HUS

A

Kids and elderly

455
Q

Presntation typical HUS

A

Sudden onset hematemesis and melena following a flu like prodrome

Oliguria/hematuria/hemolytic anemia may follow

456
Q

Treat typical HUS

A

Dialysis

457
Q

Prognosis typical HUS

A

Acute setting resolves itself, but long term prognosis is poor

  • if renal failure is managed properly with dialysis, most patients recover normal Rena,l function in weeks
  • long term outlook is more guarded due to renal damage and up to 90% exhibit some level of renal insuffiency 15-25 years later
458
Q

Morphology typical HUS

A

Fibrinoid necrosis of lobular arteries

Intermesangial hemorrhage

Intima hyperplasia and thrombosis

459
Q

Atypical HUS (non epidemic, diarrhea -, adults)

A

Worse prognosis than typical HUS since underlying conditions can be chronic and/or hard to treat

Trigger is excessive, inappropriate activation of complement

460
Q

Differentiate atypical HUS from TPP

A

Look for normal levels of ADAMTS13

461
Q

Presentation atypical HUS

A

Neuro signs and symptoms

Endothelial injury

462
Q

Inherited mutation that causes atypical HUS

A

Mutation in complement regulatory proteins, most commonly in factor H (breaks down the alternative pathway C3 convertase and protects cells from damage by uncontrolled complement activation) but can also be from defects in factor I or CD46)

463
Q

Age of onset atypical HUS

A

Any

464
Q

Presentation atypical HUS

A

Many relapses and progression to ESRD

465
Q

Antiphospholipid antibody syndrome

A

HUS without immune deposition

Primary or secondarily related to SLE

466
Q

Atypical HUS and pregnancy

A

Uncomplicated delivery results in spontaneous renal failure a day to 3 months later

Grave prognosis ; recovery possible in milder cases

467
Q

Vascular renal disease leading to atypical HUS

A

Wagner’s, scleroderma, HTN

468
Q

Chemotherapy leading to HUS

A

Cyclosporine, bleomycin, cisplatin

469
Q

Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura TTP

A

Pentax: fever, neurologic symptoms (dominant feature), microangiopathic hemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia, and renal failure

470
Q

Defiencies causing TPP

A

In ADAMTA14, normally regulates the function of vWF

-most commonly caused by inhibitory auto-antibodies, espicially in women

471
Q

Who gets TPP

A

Adults over 40 unless it is inherited and then they have episodic symptoms beginning int heir adolescence
-need some other disease to get the full form out TPP

472
Q

Treat TPP

A

Plasmapheresis

  • removes antibodies and provides functional ADAMTS13
  • can be treated successfully in more than 80% of patients (once was a terminal disease)
473
Q

Morphology HUS/TPP

ACUTE

A

Patchy or diffuse cortical necrosis

Subscapular petechiae

Glomerular capillaries are occluded by thrombi comprised of aggregated platelet and fibrin

Capillary walls are thickened from endothelial swelling and subendothelial deposits of cell debris and fibrin

Mesangiolysis

Intralobular arteris show fibrinoid necrosis and occlusive thrombi

474
Q

Morphology chronic HUS/TPP

A

Only in patties with atypical HUS or TTP

Due to continued injury and attempts to heal

Renal cortex has lots of scarring

Glomeruli are hypercellular

Tram-track BM-like in MPGN

Walls of arteries have onion skinning

All of this leads to hypoperfusion and ischemia/atrophy of the parenchyma

475
Q

Atherosclerotic ischemic renal disease

A

Adults

Bilateral renal artery stenosis causes renal ischemia

476
Q

Labs atherosclerotic ischemic renal disease

A

HTN may be absent but with bilateral stenosis, ANGII is usually elevated

477
Q

Treat atherosclerotic ischemic renal disease

A

Avoid ACE-I and ARB
-decrease in ANGII willl dilate the efferent arterioles->increased RBF but a decreased GFR=acute renal failure

Surgical revascularization can prevent further decline in renal function

478
Q

Atheroembolic renal disease

A

Emboli from atheromtous plaques proximal to renal artery (aorta, coronary angiography, abdominal aorta surgery)

Contain cholesterol crystals that appear as rhomboid clefts

Causes no problems in healthy kidneys, but infarcts lead to acute renal failure in diseased kidneys

479
Q

Sickle cell nephropathy

A

Suckling in the vasa recta decreases concentrating ability and increases thrombosis

There can be cortical scarring and patchy papillary necrosis

Characteristics are hematuria, dilute urine (hyposthenuria; dismissed concentrating ability), and proteinuria (can sometimes progress to nephrotic syndrome)

480
Q

Diffuse cortical necrosisi

A

Follows malignant HTN, obstetric emergencies, septic shock, and extensive surgery

Ischemia and coagulative necrosis is limited to cortex with white patchy infarcts

Thrombosis of glomerulus and arteries;typically focal

Hemorrhage may be preset that can form fibrin plugs to occlude the golermular capillaries

In bad cases it can quickly lead to sudden Anura and uremic death, but patchy or unilateral cases have a better prognosis**

481
Q

Infarcts

A

Most are due to emboli, espicially from mural emboli int he left atrium or ventricle status post MI

Kidney is an end organ with little collateral circulation

Infarcts are white and wedge shaped initially

Within 24 hours, they are sharply demarcated, pale, yellow white , with irregular foci of hemorrhagic discoloration

Eventually the infarcts become fibrosis leaving depressed, pale, gray white scares that have a V shape

Large infarcts of one kidney are probably associated with renal artery steosis and may cause HTN

482
Q

Agenesis of kidney bilateral

A

Bilateral incompatible with life-stillborn

Amniotic fluid is not made (oligohydramins) and the baby gets crushed when no kidney
-potter syndrome

483
Q

Unilateral agenesis of kidney

A

Compatible with life

Good kidney will undergo compensatory hypertrophy and become enlarged; some develop sclerosis and renal failure

484
Q

Renal hypoplasia

A

Failure of the kidneys to develop to a normal size
Unilateral>bilateral

Typically due to low birth weight and may contribute to lifetime risk of chronic kidney disease

May be indistinguishable from an acquired atrophic kidney

True hypoplastic kidney has reducedlobes and pyramids and no signs of scarring

485
Q

Ectopic kidneys

A

Definitive metanephros develops at ectopic foci, usually on pelvic brim or within pelvis

The ectopic kidneys are usually small and asymptomatic

May cause torsion or obstruction of ureter, predisposing for infection (pyelonephritis)

486
Q

Horshoe kidney (common)

A

Fusionof kidneys produces a horseshoe shaped structure continuous across the anterior of the aorta and inferior vena cava

Get caught by inferior mesenteric artery

Usually lower pole fusion (90%) some upper (10)

Risk for stone formation

487
Q

Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease-ADPKD

A

Multiple expanding cysts of both kidneys that ultimately destroy the renal parenchyma leading to interstitial fibrosis and cause renal failure beginning in 30-40 and almost definitely by 70

488
Q

Pathogenesis ADPKD genetics

A

AD that needs a second hit

PKD1 85% chromosome 16

PKD2. Chromosome 4

Generate cysts via polcystin 1 or 2 protein abnormality leading to proliferation of fiefferent regions of the tubules

Exact mechanism unknown, but most likely a defect in the cilia that control the mechanic sensin of Ca

489
Q

PKD1 or PKD2 more severe

A

1

Only 45% of PKD2 have renal failure at 70

490
Q

PKD1

A

Expressed in tubular epithelial cells, particularly those of the distal nephron

Unknown functional contains domains involved in cell cell and cell matrix interactions

491
Q

PKD2

A

Integral membrane protein expressed in all segments of the renal tubules and may extrarenal tissues

Ca permeable cation channel

492
Q

Morphology ADPKD

A

Bilaterally enlarged kidneys reaching enormous size (4kg)

Surface appears entirely cystic though histology reveals functional parenchyma

Arise from different regions of the tubules so cysts express variable epithelial

Cysts may be filled with a clear , serous fluid or with turbid, red to brown sometimes hemorrhagic fluid

493
Q

Who gets ADPKD

A

Norther European descent

Progression is accelerated in black males, espicially with sickle cell and/or HTN

494
Q

Presntation ADPKD

A

Also see extrarenal congenital anomalies

May be asymptomatic until renal insuffiency announces presence

Hemorrhage may cause flank pain (bleeding into cyst)

Excretion of blood clots can cause renal colic

Disease occasionally begins with insidious onset of hematuria followed by other features of progression fo chronic kidney disease such as proteinuria

495
Q

What are extrarenal congenital anomalies found in patients with polycystic kidney disease

A

40% occur in the liver from biliary epithelium and are asymptomatic—polycystic liver disease

Some occur int he lungs or spleen; mitral valve prolapse and other cardiac valvular anomalies in heart

Intracranial berry aneurysms presumably arise from altered expression of polycystic in vascular smooth muscle

  • account for 15% of deaths in these patients
  • isolated, basilar SAH in a young patient on imaging==ADPKD
496
Q

Prognosis ADPKD

A

Patients may survive for years with azotemia slowly progressing to uremia

40% die coronary or hypertensive disease

25% from infection

15% from a rupture berry aneurysm or hypertensive intracerebral hemorrhage

497
Q

Autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease==childhood form of polycystic kidney disease

A

PKHD1 (chromosome 6) codes for fibrocystin, highly expressed in adult and fetal kidney and also in liver and pancreas
Mutations disrupt the collecting tubule+biliary epithelium differentiation

Without history, this can be either recessive (kids) or dominant (adults)

498
Q

Morphology AR polycystic disease

A

Enlarged smooth surfaced, tiny elongated cysts along the interior replace the cortex and medulla perpendicular to the cortical surface
-have a sponge like appearance when cut

Lined by cuboidal cells bc all cysts come from the collecting tubules
-ADPKD==arises from different regions of tubules

Liver has cysts associated with portal fibrosis and proliferation of portal bile ducts

Invariably bilateral

499
Q

LM ARPD

A

Cylindrical or saccular dilation of all CT

I

500
Q

Prognosis ARPD

A

Highly fatal in infancy, obvious renal failure in all cases

Childhood form shows smaller cysts at right angles to cortical surface

501
Q

Four subsets of ARPD

A

Perinatal, neonatal, infantile, juvenile

Perinatal and neonatal most common

502
Q

Survivors of ARPD

A

Develop congenital hepatic fibrosis (biliary epithelium in origin) with HTN and splenomegaly

503
Q

Medullary sponge kidney/innocuous medullary cystic disease

A

Occurs in adults with unknown pathogenesis
Found incidentally on radiograph
Scarring is typically absent
Multiple cystic dilations that consist of cuboidal or transitional epithelium from collecting tubules

504
Q

Nephronophthisis and adult onset medullary cystic disease

A

Group of progressice diseases that are characterized by variable numbers of cysts in the medulla, typically concentrated at the corticomedullary junction

Almost always associated with some degree of renal dysfunction

As a group, nephronophthisis complex is the msot common genetic cause of ESRD in children and young adults

505
Q

Three variant of nephronophthisis and adult onset medullary cystic disease

A

Sporadic nonfamilial

Familial juvenile nephronophthisis

Renal retinal dysplasia

506
Q

Pathogenesis nephronophthisis and adult onset medullary cystic disease

A

Injury begins at the distal tubules with tubular BM disruption followed by progressive atrophy of the medulla and cortex leading to interstitial fibrosis

The cortical tubulointerstital adage is the cause of the eventual renal failure

507
Q

Pathogenesis nephronophthisis and adult onset medullary cystic disease
Genetics

A

Familial-AR

Juvenile-NPH genes make nephrocystin (JBTS-#) without a known pathogenesis
—-AD and AR form

MCKD1 or 2 defects are associated with ESRD in adults and is AD

508
Q

Morphology Pathogenesis nephronophthisis and adult onset medullary cystic disease

A

Small kidneys with contracted granular surfaces

Large cysts at the cortico medullary junction small cysts in the cortex

Cysts are lined by flattened cuboidal epithelium with inflammation or fibrosis surrounding it

In the cortex: atrophy and thickening of the tubular B< with intestinal fibrosis

Glomerular structure is preserved

509
Q

Who gets nephronophthisis and adult onset medullary cystic disease

A

Affects children , suspected in unexplained renal failure with familial history

510
Q

Presentpresetnation nephronophthisis and adult onset medullary cystic disease

A

Polyuria and polydipsia reflecting inability to concentrate urine

There is Na wasting an tubular acidosis

511
Q

Prognosis nephronophthisis and adult onset medullary cystic disease

A

Renal failure occurs in 5-10 years

Cysts may be too small to see on radiograph

512
Q

Multicystic renal dysplasia

A

Sporadic disorder that can be unilateral or bilateral, and almost always cystic and nephrectomy; remaining kidney functions normal
-good prognosis

Bilateral:renal failure may ultimately result
-worse prognosis

Kidneys enlarged, extremely irregularly, and multicystic

513
Q

Histology multicystic renal dysplasia

A

Lined by flattened epithelium

Presence of islands of undifferentiated mesenchyme, often with cartilage and immature collecting ducts==characteristic feature

514
Q

Acquired cystic disease (dialysis)

A

Caused by end stage kidney disease with prolonged dialysis

Cortical and medullary cysts that contain clear fluid but may bleed (causing hematuria) after harmonic exposure

Cysts are lined by hyperplastic or flattened tubular epithelium and often contain calcium oxalate crystals

  • calcium phosphate stones are more common that calcium oxalate int he general population
  • calcium oxalate stones are more common than calcium phosphate stomes in patients receiving renal dialysis
515
Q

Calcium oxalate stones are ore common than calcium phosphate stones in patients receiving what

A

Dialysis

516
Q

What is acquired cystic disease associated with

A

Renal cell carcinoma from the walls of cysts

517
Q

What is a clinically significant complication int he setting of calcium oxalate stones ina. Patient receiving dialysis

A

Renal cell carcinoma

518
Q

Simple renal cysts

A

Get mistaken for tumors bc they create awkward radiographically shadows
-differentiate them bc the cysts have:smooth contours, avascular and give fluid signals on ultrasonography

519
Q

Morphsimple renal cysts (localized)

A

Translucent, grey, glistening, and lined by a single layered membrane (cuboidal or flattened cuboidal that can be atrophic)

520
Q

Clinical simple renal cysts

A

May bleed into them causing acute pain and distention

Are usually small and cortical

521
Q

Obstructive urinary lesion can lead to what

A

Infection and stone formation

Almost always leads to permanent renal atrophy (hydronephrosis or obstructive uroopathy)

522
Q

Congenital anomalies leading to OUL

A
Posterior urethral valves
Urethral strictures
Mental strenuous is
Bladder neck obstruction 
Ureteropelvic jucntion narrowing/obstruction 
Severe vesicoureteral refluc
523
Q

Hydronephrosis

A

Dilation of the renal pelvis and calyces associated with progressive atrophy of the kidney due to obstruction to outflow of urine

524
Q

What does hydronephrosis cause

A

High pressure int he pelvis is transmitted back through the collecting ducts into the cortex-> compressses renal vasculature int he medulla

Decreased medullary blood flow, but GFR persists for some time
-GFR only begins to decrease after lots of damage

Often there is significant interstitial inflammation, even int he absence of infection

525
Q

Morphology hydronephrosis with sudden/complete obstruction

A

Sudden/complete obstruction: mild dilation of the pelvis and calyces with atrophy of the renal parenchyma sometimes

526
Q

Morphology hydronephrosis intermittent/incomplete obstruction

A

Progressive dilation occcurs leading to hydronrphrosis

527
Q

Hydronephrosis can eventually turn the kidney into what

A

Large, thin walled cystic structure

528
Q

Presentation hydronephrosis

A

Most of the early symptoms are produced by the underlying cause of hydronephrosis

Acute obstruction-may provoke pain from distention

Unilateral complete or partial hydronephrosis-can remain silent for long times as the other kidney compensates

Bilateral partial obstruction-inability to concentrate urine (polyuria, nocturnal), distal tubular acidosis, renal salt wasting, secondary renal calculi, and chronic tubulointerstital nephritis with scarring and atrophy of the papilla and medulla. HTN common

Bilateral complete obstruction: oliguria/Anura: incompatible with survival unless the obstruction is relieved
-after the block is removed, the kidney can undergo post obstructive diuresis where the kidney excretes urine rich in NaCl

529
Q

Urolithiasis, renal calculi, stones

A

Formation of solid crystals in the GU tract, most forming int he kidney as a result of increased concentration of particles that precipitate out

530
Q

Cause of renal caliclui

A

**increased urinary concentration of the stones constituents such that it exceeds their solubility in urine (supersaturation)

Acidification of the urine and low urine flow rates may also contribute
-promotes precipitation

Postulated that stone formation is enhanced by a defiency in inhibitors of crystal formation in urine
-pyrophosphate, diphosphonate, citrate,

531
Q

Calcium oxalate stones

A

Most common type of stone 75%

532
Q

What are calcium oxalate stones associated with

A

Hypercaliuria, with or without hypercalcemia
When both are present, it is a result of hyperparathyroidism which can be a result of progressive kidney failure

Renal impairment of calcium reabsorption of a hyper-absorptive intestinal tract can lead to hypercalciuria without hypercalcemia

533
Q

20% of calcium oxalate stones are associated with uric acid secretion

A

Hyperuricosuric calcium nephrolithiasis

May occur with or withou hypercalcuria

Involves nucleation of the crystal in the CD

534
Q

10% of calcium oxalate stones are associated with hyperoxaluria

A

Primary/genetic form is less common

Overabsorption from diet (enteric hyperoxaluria) occurs even in vegetarians who have a diet rich in oxalate

535
Q

Hypocituria and calcium oxalate stones

A

Seen in diarrhea and metabolic acidosis may also lead to calcium stones

536
Q

15-20% of calcium oxalate stones have no known metabolic derrrangement!

A

Can also be associated with diffuse bone disease, sarcoidosis and other hypercalcemic states

537
Q

Sturvite stones, made of magnesium ammonium phosphate (triple stones)

A

Caused by urea splitting bacteria aka an infection by proteus species and some staph

Increased ammonia from urea degradation int he tubules causes an alkylation of urine , favoring magnesium ammonium phosphate salts

Forms the largest KIDNEY STONES

STAGHORN CALCULI OCCUPYING RENAL PELVIS ARE CAUSED BY INFECTION AND ARE STRUVITE

538
Q

Uric acid stones-who gets

A

Common in patients who have conditions predisposing to hyperuricemia, such as gout or any leukemia’s, forming at a low (acidic) urinary pH

  • uric acid is insoluble in acidic uring with a pH of less than 5.5
  • alkalinize the urine to solubilize the stone and pee it out-can give them bicarb

More than half don’t have hyperuricemia or increased urinary excretion of uric acid

Theses are radiolucent, unlike Ca stones

539
Q

Cystine stones

A

Formed with genetic diseases that prevent reabsorption of proteins from the lumen

Form at low urinary pH

540
Q

Morphology stones

A

Unilateral in renal calyx, pelvis or bladder

Cary in size (smaller in pelvis)

Smooth or jagged

Staghorn calculi are large branching stone, forming off a small stone in the pelvis, growing upwards, forming a cast of the pelvis and calyces

541
Q

Who gets renal stones

A

Men 20-30

Familial pattern

542
Q

Presntation renal stones

A

Renal colic : intermittent, sharp flank pain that may radiate to groin

Hematuria may be present as the stone passes and shreds the ureter

Large stones do not pass and stay in pelvis, causing obstruction->hydronephrosis

543
Q

Renal stones are a predisposition for what

A

Infection

544
Q

Renal papillary adenoma

A

Benign small pale yellow gray, well circumscribed nodules in the cortex

545
Q

How find renal papillary adenoma

A

Incidental finding at autopsy

546
Q

LM renal papillary adenoma

A

Complex, branching, papillomatous structure with complex fronds
-cells are cuboidal to polygonal in shape and have regular, small central nuclei, little cytoplasm and no atypical

547
Q

EM renal papillary adenoma

A

Appear as Low grade papillary renal cell carcinoma ——potentially malignant
-share some immunohistochemical and cytogenic features (trisomies 7 and 17)

548
Q

Potential malignancy of renal papillary adenoma

A

Potentially malignant at any size but espicially if greater than 3 cm—consider all adenomas as potentially malignant

> 3 cm metasticize-malignant
<3cm do not metasticise -benign

549
Q

Angiomyolipoma

A

Benign neoplasm consisting of vessels, smooth msucle and fat from the perivascular epithelioid cells

MAY SPONTANEOUSLY. HEMORRHAGE

550
Q

What is angiomyolipoma associated with

A

Tuberous sclerosis, loss of function mutations in TSC1 or 2 tumor suppressor genes
-characterized by lesions of the cerebral cortex that produce epilepsy./retardation, skin problems and other benign tumors

551
Q

Oncocytoma

A

Epithelial neoplasm/tumor composed of large, eosinophilic cells with small, round, benign looking nuclei that have large nucleeoli

552
Q

Where are oncocytoma

A

Comes from the intercalated cells of the CD

553
Q

EM oncocytoma

A

Massive amounts of mitochondria (eosinophilic cell filled with mitochondria

554
Q

Malignant oncocytoma

A

Benign but it can get pretty big (12cm) and cause compression syndrome

555
Q

What do oncocytoma look like

A

Tan to brown , well circumscribed with a central scar

556
Q

What is the most common renal cancer in adults

A

Renal cell carcinoma

557
Q

Who gets renal cell carcinoma

A

Males 50-60

558
Q

Why get renal cell carcinoma

A

Most idiopathic, some familial

559
Q

Risk factors for RCC

A

SMOKING!!!

Obesity, HTN, unopposed estrogen therapy , asbestos, petroleum, heavy metals

560
Q

Where are RCC

A

Mainly poles

561
Q

Genetic RCC

A

VHL

Hereditary leiomyomatosis and RCC syndrome

Hereditary papillary carcinoma

Birt-I logg-Dube syndrome

562
Q

VHL RCC

A

Nearly all patients will develop bilateral RCC and cysts if they live long enough
Cerebellar involvement too

563
Q

Hereditary leiomyomatosis and RCC

A

AD
Mutations in FH gene (fumarate hydratase)

Cutaneous and uterine leiomyomata with an aggressive type of papillary carcinoma with increased risk for metastatic spread

564
Q

Hereditary papillary carcinoma

A

AD
Mutations in MET protooncogenes
Many bilateral tumors with papillary histology

565
Q

Birt-1 log cube syndrome

A

AD
Mutations in BI ID (expressed folliculin)
Skin problems , pulmonary cysts or bless, and renal tumors with a wide range of histologic subtypes

566
Q

Most common type of RCC

A

Clear cell carcinoma more than 95% sporadic!

567
Q

Mutation clear cell carcinoma

A

98% loss of chromosome 3 where the VHL gene is

VHL-ubiquitin lipase that targets HIF-1
Chromosomal deletion allows for high levels of HIF1 even under norms in conditions

Inappropriate expression of a number of genes turned on by HIF-1
-genes that promote angiogenesis (VEGF) and genes that stimulate cell growth (insulin like growth factor 1)

568
Q

What does CCC cause

A

Unilateral tumors
Form from proximal tubular epithelium presuming with large clear or granular cells

Nonpapillary tumors that rare usually unilateral

569
Q

What do CCC look like

A

Bright yellow white grey tumors

570
Q

Why are CCC yellow

A

Foam like fat cells present in tumor

RCC shows focal cytoplasmic lipid positivity that other adenocarcinomas do not

571
Q

Morphology CCC

A

Undifferentiated but can show some atypia

572
Q

CCC are likely to invade the __ __ and may go all the way to the ___. Causing what

A

Renal vein
Heart

Cause a varicocele if located on the left

573
Q

Papillary carcinoma

A

Frequently multifocal

574
Q

What is papillary carcinoma associated with

A

Sporadic: trisomies 7 and 17, loss of Y in males

Familial:just trisomies 7 (MET pronto-oncogene that encodes the tyrosine kinase receptor for hepatocyte growth factor—scatter factor)

——not associated with 3p deletions (like VHL and CCC)

575
Q

What is papillary carcinoma associated with

A

Dialysis associated cystic disease

576
Q

Morphology papillary carcinoma

A

Hemorrhagic and cystic

Cuboidal or columnar epithelium arranged in papillary pattern that came from the distal convulsed tubules

-foam cells are common in the core

Little stroma but it is highly vascularized

577
Q

Chromophobe renal carcinoma

A

Eosinophilic cytoplasm, prominent cell membrane, perinuclear halo, localized to vasculature in solid sheets

  • many chromosome losses with extreme hypodiploidy
  • grow from intercalated cells of the collecting ducts (like oncocytoma
578
Q

Prognosis chromophobe renal carcinoma

A

Excellent

579
Q

Xp11 translocation carcinoma

A

Xp11 translocation carcinoma

-young, translocation of the TFE3 gene, cells have clear cytoplasm with papillary architecture

580
Q

Collecting duct (bellini duct) carcinoma)

A

Come from collecting duct cells in the medulla

Irregular channels lined by highly atypical epithelium with a hobnail pattern

Malignant cells that create glands enmeshed within medullary fibrotic stroma

Medullary carcinoma is morphologically smiler to neoplasm seen in patietsnw ith sickle cell trait (heterozygous)

581
Q

____ changes in any type of renal cell carcinoma leads to a worse prognosis

A

Sarcomatoid changes

582
Q

How find RCC

A

Often asymptomatic, discovered by CT scan or MRI for a nonrenal cause

May reach massive sizes 10cm before symptoms set in

583
Q

Classic triad symptoms RCC

A

Hematuria, flaunt pain, mass

  • hematuria is often microscopic and intermittent
  • mass is often non palpable when found
584
Q

_% of RCC have metasticized prior to discovery

A

25

Metasticize widely before symptoms!

585
Q

Where do RCC go

A

Lungs, bones, regional LN, liver, adrenals, and brain

586
Q

___ syndromes are huge in RCC

A

Paraneoplastic

587
Q

What paraneoplastic syndromes see in RCC

A

Polycythemia, hypercalcemia, hypertension, Cushing, leukemoid reactions, amyloidosis and feminization/masculinazation

588
Q

Why is RCC a great mimic in medicine

A

Tends to produce a diversity of systemic symptoms not related to the kidney

589
Q

There is a high 5 year survival with RCC UNLESS

A

Renal vein invasion

Extension into the perinephric fat

590
Q

Stage 1

Note:statins is dependent on local involvement

A

Only kidney involved

60-80% 5 year survival

591
Q

Stage II

A

Kidney and fat involved

15% 5 year survival

592
Q

State III

A

Kidney and renal vein or lymph are involved <10% 5 year survival

593
Q

Treat RCC

A

Total nephrectomy is usually curative without metastasis, but partial nephrectomy is recommended to T1a tumors (<4cm)
VEGF tyrosine kinase inhibitors are used as adjuncts

594
Q

Urothelial carcinoma of the pelvis

A

Some primary renal tumors come from the urothelial of the renal pelvis

Range from being papillomas to invasive urothelial (transitional cel) carcinomas

595
Q

Why are urothelial carcinoma of the pelvis quickly found

A

Produce hematuria so they are typically small

Painless hematuria

596
Q

1 risk factors urothelial carcinoma

A

Smoking

597
Q

Presntation urothelial carcinoma

A

Painless hematuria

May block urine outflow and lead to hydronephrosis and flank pain

Can be multiple tumors found in other places like the bladder

598
Q

Prognosis urothelial carcinoma of the pelvic

A

Not good as they spread through walls easily

599
Q

What are urothelial carcinomas associated with

A

Analgesic nephropathy