Exam 3: Renal Nephrotic vs Nephritic Diseases Flashcards

1
Q

Mesangium:

Mesangium are _______ cells that secrete the ____

Can influence GFR by _____

A

Mesangium:
modified smooth muscle cells that interweave between capillaries

They secrete the ECM, cytokines

Can influence GFR by contracting and relaxing to alter blood flow

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2
Q

Glomerular Transit:

Renal blood flow comprises what?

What is renal plasma flow

Normal GFR (in mL/min and L/day)? Normal filtered fraction?

A

Renal blood flow is plasma + hematocrit

Because under normal circumstances, RBCs do not filter through, renal plasma flow is just the plasma

GFR is 120 mL/min or 180 L/day

20% is the normal filtered fraction

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3
Q

What are the factors that affect GFR? Think of the equation

A

GFR equation:

Surface area (can be affected by mesangium)

Hydrostatic pressure in bowman space can be affected by renal stones

oncotic pressure of bowman’s space is normally zero, but can be a factor in renal failure, causing GFR to decrease significantly

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4
Q

Spectrum of Glomerular Diseases:
Explain the mechanisms for nephrotic vs nephritic diseases

A

Nephrotic:

  • injury to podocytes
  • changed architecture
    • scarring
    • deposition of matrix or other elements

Nephritic:

  • inflammation
  • reactive cell proliferation
  • breaks in GBM
  • blood cell cresent formation
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5
Q

Presentation of Glomerular Diseases:

Nephritic Vs Nephrotic:

Which is more hypertensive? Which patient has more edema? What does the urine look like and why

A

Nephritic:

  • way more hypertensive
  • urine looks angry - coke like with RBCs and RBC casts
  • Why? ongoing inflammation in glomeruli and leakage of RBCs from glomeruli

Nephrotic:

  • edematous (puffy patient)
  • foamy urine due to lots of protein - beer like NO RBCs
  • Why? No inflammation in glomeruli, protein no longer passing through cell membranes
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6
Q

Describe the differences in nephrotic and nephritic diseases in the various categories:

Onsent, how much edema, blood pressure, jugular venous pressure, proteinuria, hematuria, RBC casts, serum albumin

A

Look at the chart:

Nephrotic: slower onset, more edema, normal to slightly raised BP, normal JVP, way more protein, NO RBC casts, low serum albumin (losing it in urine)

Nephritic: sudden onset, less edema but still some, raised BP and JVP, little proteinuria, hematuria present, has RBC casts, normal serum albumin

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7
Q

Picture the visual differences between nephritic and nephrotic (that visual picture)

A
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8
Q

Studying Glomerular Diseases

What can an immuno stain and an electron microscopy help in diagnosing glomerular disease?

A

Immuno stains: stain for a particular antibody

Electron Microscopy: can tell where the immune complexes are aggregating

BOTH require a biopsy sample

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9
Q

Presentation of Acute Nephritis:

Reduction in ____

Oliguria, ___, edema (a little)

______ with dysmorphic RBcs and RBC casts, variable _____

WBC and WBC casts

A

Presentation of Acute Nephritis:

Reduction in GFR

Oliguria, HTN, edema (a little)

Hematuria with dysmorphic casts, RBC casts, variable proteinuria

WBC and WBC casts

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10
Q

Explain the LOCATION of the following syndromes aka where is the problem in the nephron:

Acute Post streptococcal glomerulonephritis

Goodpasture’s Syndrome

Wegner’s Granulomatosis

Meningeal Proliferative Glomurulonephritis

A

Acute Post Strep: endothelial cell proliferation

Goodpasture Syndrome: GBM issues

Wegener’s granulomatosis: blood vessels

Meningeal Proliferative…: mesangium issues

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11
Q

Post Streptococal GLomerulonephritis (PSGN)

Clinical Presentation:

nephritis 1-3 weeks after ____ or ______

oliguria, edema, and ______
diuresis starts within a weeK

Mechanism?

A

PSGN:

Clinical Presentation:
nephritis 1-3 weeks after throat or skin infection (streptococci)

Oliguria (small amounts of urine being produced), edema, and HTN
diuresis starts within a week

Mechanism: immune complex mediated (endothelial cell proliferation creating subepithelial humps)

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12
Q

PSGN:

Pathological Findings:

  • excessive cellular proliferation in _____ and _____ within the glomeruli
  • _________ “humps”

Treatment and Prognosis:

  • supportive, favorable prognosis
  • treat with _____
  • repeated episodes are uncommon
A

PSGN:
Pathological Findings

  • excessive endothelial cellular proliferation
  • subepithelial “humps”

Treatment and Prognosis:

  • supportive, favorable prognosis
  • treat with immunosuppressive (treat underlying infection)
  • repeated episodes are uncommon
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13
Q

Goodpasture’s Syndrome:

Rare

Pathogenesis:

Antibody directed against _______ within the glomerular capillaries and alveolar wall

A

Goodpasture’s Syndrome:

rare (more males get it than females)

pathogenesis:

antibody directed against non-collagen domain of alpha 3 chain of type 4 collagen in glomerular capillary and alveolar wall

after exposure to smoke, hydrocarbon, (viral respiratory infection)

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14
Q

Goodpasture’s Syndrome:

Onset is caused by what?

How do diagnose it?

How many treated people recover?

A

Goodpasture’s Syndrome:

Onset: exposure to smoke, hydrocarbons, viral respiratory infections unmask the antigen in alveoli inducing antibody formation

> 70% of treated recover renal function, relapses are uncommon

Diagnose by staining for the antibody against type 4 collagen

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15
Q

Wegener’s Granulomatosus:

Predominant in _______ aged persons

Presentation: chronic upper and lower respiratory tract disease with necrotizing granulmatous vasculitis (blood vessels are dying)

Pathology: diffuse or segmental necrotixing pacuri immune to GN with cresents

Treatment?

Unreated 2 year mortality rate?

A

Wegener’s Granulomatosus:

Predominant in middle aged persons

Presentation: chronic upper and lower respiratory tract disease with dying blood vessels

Pathology: diffuse or segmental necrotixing, pauci immune GN with cresents

Treatment: respond to steroids and PO Cytoxan is dramatic

Untreated 2 year mortality rate is 80-90%

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16
Q

Whta is the most common cause of idiopathic nephritis in young males?

A

Most common cause of idiopathic nephritis in young males is mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis (IgA)

17
Q

Mesangial Proliferative Glomerulonephritis (IgA)

  • Most common cause of idiopathic nephritis in young males
  • Presentation: asymptomatic microscopic or intermittant gross ____ with or without _____

Pathogenesis?

______ disease

Treatment?

A

Mesangial Proliferative Glomerulonephritis:

Most common cause of idiopathic nephritis in young males

Presentation: asymptomatic microscopic or intermittant gross hematuria with or without proteinuria

Pathogenesis: mucosal IgA reacts with unknown antigen

Progressive Disease

Treatment: immunosupressants

18
Q

Summary: Nephritic Syndrome:

Location: ___, ___, ____

Presentation?
Causes?

A

Summary Nephritic Syndrome:

Location: mesangium, subendothelial space, GBM

Presentation: Angry urine with RBCs (coke like), cast, elevated serum creatinine, proteunuria

Causes: large range, most common is infection

19
Q

Nephrotic Syndrome:

Proteinuria

Low _____ levels

Edema

Hyper_____

Hyper_____ state

A

Nephrotic Syndrome:

Proteinuria

Low albumin levels (losing it in urine)

Edema

Hyperlipidemia

Hypercouagulable state

20
Q

Depending on the disease, complications of nephrotic syndrome will vary.

Give some complications of nephrotic syndrome

sepsis, cellulitis, hyper____ state, vein clotting, anemia, hyper______, abnormal thyroid function, hypo______, activation of RAAS, Edema

A

Nephrotic Syndrome Complications:

Sepsis, cellulitis, hypercoagulable state, vein clotting, anemia, hyperlipidemia, abnormal thyrpid, hypocalcemia, activation of RAAS, edema

21
Q

Minimal Change Disease (nephrotic):

Pathogenesis, unknown, primary disorder of ____

Main cause of nephrotic syndrome in ______

Renal Function and BP are _______, HTN may be present in ____

Can be seen in patients taking which two meds? and those with hodgkin’s, leukemia, and HIV

A

Minimal Change Disease: (nephrotic)
Pathogenesis: primary disorder of podocytes

Main cause of nephrotic syndrome in children

Renal function and BP usually normal, HTN may be present in adults

Can be seen with patients on NSAIDs and lithium, and those with Hodgkin’s, leukemia, HIV

22
Q

Minimal Change Disease:

What would be present on Electron Microscopy?

How do you treat these patients?

A

Minimal Change Disease:

EM: fusion of foot processes

Treat patient with corticosteroids or immunosuppressants

23
Q

Membranous Nephropathy (nephrotic)

Commonest cause of idiopathic nephrotic syndrome in _______

Nephrotic proteinuria in > 90% with normal ___ at presentation

High incidence of ____ events

A

Membranous Nephropathy (nephrotic):

Commonest cause of idipathic nephrotic syndrome in middle aged white adults

Nephrotic proteinuria in > 90% with normal GFR at presentation

High incidence of thrombotic events - blood clots in veins because of loss of proteins that prevent clotting

24
Q

Membranous Nephropathy:

Treat with medications that suppress the immune system

Caused by production of an antibody directed against an antigen in the _____ space

A

Membranous Nephropathy:
Treat with medications that supress the immune system

Caused by production of an antibody directed against an antigen in the subepithelial space

25
Q

Focal Segmental Glomerulosclerosis (FSGS):

Familial Mutations in genes for podocyte protines “permeability inducing factor”

________ (is the gene)

Most common form of idiopathic NS in ____

Massive proteinuria, HTN, low GFR in 30-40%

Common secondary causes?

A

FSGS:
Familial mutation in genes for podocyte proteins “permeability inducing factor”

APOL-1

Most common form of idiopathic NS in African Americans

Massive proteinuria, HTN, low GFR
Common secondary causes: IV drug use, sickle cell, morbid obesity

26
Q

Summary of Nephrotic:
Onset

Edema?

Blood pressure?

Proteinuria

Hematuria

Red blood cell casts present?

Serum albumin level?

A

NEPHROTIC:
insiduous onset

edema present

blood pressure: normal to raised

proteinuria: tons
hematuria: may or may not occur

Red blood cell casts ABSENT

serum albumin level: LOW

27
Q

What are the examples of nephritic syndromes that we went over?

What are the examples of nephrotic syndromes that we went over?

A

Nephritic Syndromes:

  • Post-Strep Glomerulonephritis
  • Goodpasture’s Syndrome
  • Wegener’s Granulomatosus
  • Mesangial Proliferaltive Glomerularnephritis/IgA

Nephrotic Syndromes:

  • Minimal Change Disease
  • Membranous Nephropathy
  • FSGS