Glomerulonephritis Flashcards
(25 cards)
general features of glomerulonephritis? (4)
haematuria
proteinuria
hypertension
renal insufficiency
haematuria in glomerulonephritis?
persistent microscopic haematuria with dysmorphic RBss
proteinuria in glomerulonephritis?
persistent proteinuria
what does it mean by renal insufficiency?
rising creatinine
what is the characteristics of nephrotic syndrome? (4)
hypoalbuminemia
hyperlipidemia
oedema
proteinuria (>3.5g/day)
difference between diffuse and focal ?
diffuse >50% glomeruli affected
focal <50% glomeruli affected
post-streptococcal glomerulonephritis?
10-21 days after throat or skin infection
most common is Lancefield Group A Streptococci
treat: frusemide, vasodilation for HT, antibiotics
IgA nephropathy?
commonest cause of glomerulonephritis
IgA deposition in the mesangium with mesangial proliferation
common in 20/30s and males
presentation of IgA nephropathy?
microscopic haematuria
proteinuria
nephrotic syndrome
IgA crescentic glomerulonephritis
crescentic glomerulonephritis? (3)
ANCA-associated
anti-GBM
others: IgA vasculitis, SLE..
Anti-GBM disease?
rare caused by circulating anti glomerular basement membrane (anti-GBM)
two peaks: 3rd and 6/7th decade
diagnosis in Anti-GBM disease?
anti-GBM antibodies in serum and kidney
Anti-GBM disease presentation?
nephritis
nephritis plus lung haemorrhage
Anti-GBM disease treatment?
aggressive immunosuppression: steroid, plasma exchange and cyclophosphamide
nephrotic syndrome management (5)?
treat oedema treat HT thrombosis risk - heparin/warfarin statins reduce infection risk (vaccines)
minimal change nephrotic syndrome?
commonest form in children
sudden onset of oedema
complete loss of proteinuria with steroids
2/3rd patients relapse
minimal change nephrotic syndrome treatment?
prednisolone then taper off then repeat for initial relapse
any subsequent relapse: cyclophosphamide, cyclosporin, tacrolimus, mycophenolate mofetil
prognosis favourable but careful for steroid toxicity
membranous nephropathy? causes?
commonest cause of nephrotic syndrome in adults
majority idiopathic, some malignancy, SLE, arthritis
membranous nephropathy serological marker?
anti-phospholipase A2 receptor (PLA2R)
membranous nephropathy treatment?
general measures for at least 6 months
immunosuppression if symptomatic
cyclophosphamide and steroids in alternative months for 6 months
IgG glomerulonephritis?
IgG deposits itself between the basal lamina and podocyte, it is too big to filter into urine but activated complement C3 which punches holes in the filter which allows albumin to leak and nephrotic syndrome
1/4 in renal failure within 10 years
Crescentic glomerulonephritis?
granulomatosis with polyangitis
microscopic polyarteritis
anti-GBM changes
Crescentic glomerulonephritis test?
Wegeners test with serum showing presence of anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA)
what are ANCA directed at?
proteinase 3 and myeloperoxidase