Nephrotic syndrome Flashcards

1
Q

Which diseases can lead to nephritic syndrome?

A
Diabetic nephropathy
Minimal change disease
Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis
Membranous nephropathy
Congenital nephrotic syndrome 
SLE
Amyloidosis
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2
Q

What is nephrotic syndrome?

A

Increased filtration of macromolecules across the glomerular capillary due to structural and functional abnormalities of the glomerular podocytes
Hypoalbuminaemia
Oedema
Hypercholesterolaemia and hypertriglycarideaemia

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3
Q

What causes membranoproliferazive glomerulonephritis?

A
Chronic infection (abscesses, IE,)
Cryloglobuminaemia secondary to hep C
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4
Q

What are the clinical features of nephrotic syndrome?

A

Oedema of ankles, genitals and abdominal wall
Periorbital oedema and arms in severe cases
Proteinuria
Hypoalbuminaemia
hyperlipidaemia
Complications- hypertension, thromboembolic disorders, peritonitis

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5
Q

What occurs in minimal change disease?

A
Nephrotic syndrome
Most common in children 
T cells attack the foot processes of podocytes (effacement), less of charge barrier so albumin can pass through 
Associated with Hodgkin's lymphoma 
No change seen on light microscopy
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6
Q

What are the histological descriptions of glomerular pathology?

A

Global: whole glomerulus is diseased
Segmental: small patches of one glomerulus are damaged
Diffuse: >50% glomeruli
Focal: <50% glomeruli

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7
Q

What changes predispose the development of venous thromboembolism in nephrotic syndrome?

A

Loss of antithrombin III

Protein C and S

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