Pathoma: Nephrotic Syndrome Flashcards

1
Q

The hallmark of nephrotic syndrome is proteinuria exceeding _____________.

A

3.5 grams per day

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2
Q

What are the five major traits of nephrotic syndrome?

A
Edema
Hyperlipidemia
Lipiduria
Proteinuria
Hypoalbuminemia
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3
Q

What three risk factors does nephrotic syndrome increase?

A

Hypercoagulable
Infection risk
Vitamin D deficiency

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4
Q

Minimal change disease is usually __________. It can be associated with __________.

A

idiopathic; Hodgkin’s disease

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5
Q

What causes the effacement of podocytes?

A

Cytokines

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6
Q

Why does Hodgkin’s lymphoma lead to minimal change disease?

A

Overproduction of cytokines by the Reed-Sternberg cells

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7
Q

Minimal change disease leads to loss of __________, but not ___________.

A

albumin; immunoglobulin

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8
Q

Although FSGS is most often idiopathic, it has these associations: ____________.

A
African-American and Hispanic males
Age 20 - 40
HIV
Heroin
Sickle cell
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9
Q

FSGS will have ________ immunofluorescence and __________ immune deposits.

A

no; no

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10
Q

Other than minimal change disease, which kind of nephrotic syndrome has effacement of the podocyte processes?

A

FSGS

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11
Q

FSGS has a __________ response to steroids.

A

poor

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12
Q

Again, membranous nephropathy is associated with these four things: _____________.

A

Bugs: HBV, HCV
Drugs: NSAIDs, penicillamine
Tumors
Rheum: SLE

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13
Q

Where do the immune deposits lie in membranous nephropathy?

A

Sub-epithelium

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14
Q

The “dome and spike” appearance of membranous nephropathy results from ____________.

A

membrane forming around immune deposits

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15
Q

The “tram-track” membrane appears in __________.

A

membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis

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16
Q

Where are the immune deposits in membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis?

A

Sub-endothelium or basement membrane

17
Q

Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis is broken into two types: _____________.

A

Type I: sub-endothelial (HBV and HCV)
Type II: basement membrane (C3 nephritic factor–an antibody that stabilizes C3 convertase and leads to overactivation of complement)

18
Q

By what pathophysiology does diabetes mellitus lead to nephrotic syndrome?

A

High blood sugar leads to non-enzymatic glycosylation of the arteriolar basement membrane, which leads to hyalinization. This predominantly affects the efferent arteriole, leading to increased GFR and subsequent nephrotic syndrome. (This is also why ACE inhibitors are good for diabetics!)

19
Q

What histologic sign is indicative of diabetic glomerulosclerosis?

A

Kimmelstiel-Wilson nodules (areas of hypocellularity in the mesangium)