Which one involves blood? Protein?? Beckoning back to the Step 1 days of yonder, let’s dive into the a little bit of renal anatomy and disease.
Basics
- Nephrons
- The renal functional units (workhorse of the kidneys)
- Composed of
- Glomerulus
- made up of afferent and efferent arterioles
- Filters blood into the tubules
- Tubules
- Converts filtrate into urine
- Glomerulus

Nephrotic Syndrome
- Glomerular disorder characterized by proteinuria
- >3.5 g/day
- Diagnosis
- UA, CMP, CBC. lipid and autoimmune panel
- CXR if concerned for associated effusion
- Types
- Minimal Change Disease
- Account for 90% of cases of nephrotic syndrome in children under the age of 10 years
- Diffuse effacement of the epithelial cell foot processes leading to proteinuria causing edema and intravascular depletion
- Due to decreased oncotic pressure
- Loss all the “good” proteins in your body
- Hypovolemic shock
- Hypertension
- Thromboembolic events
- DVT and renal vein thrombosis
- Due to decreased levels of antithrombin III and plasminogen
- Clinical presentation
- Edema (classically periorbital edema)
- Malaise, fatigue, weight gain
- Growth failure
- Usually successfully treated with steroids
- May progress to FSGS
- Focal Segmental Glomerulosclerosis
- Segmental sclerosis and hyalinosis
- Can be idiopathic or genetic
- Other causes: HIV infection, morbid obesity, reflux nephropathy
- More common in African Americans and age <10 years old
- Primary FSGS has inconsistent response to steroids
- May progress to chronic renal disease
- Membranous nephropathy
- Deposition of immune complexes in the GBM
- More common in Caucasians
- 1/3 of patients achieve remission
- 40% go on to develop ESRD
- Amyloidosis
- Kidney is most common organ involved in systemic amyloidosis
- Diabetic glomerulonephropathy
- Nonenzymatic glycosylation of the GBM and afferent arterioles
- Allows proteins to leak through
- Most common cause of chronic renal disease in the US
- Nonenzymatic glycosylation of the GBM and afferent arterioles
- Minimal Change Disease
Nephritic Syndrome
- Glomerular disorder characterized by glomerular inflammation and bleeding
- Limited proteinuria (<3.5g/day)
- salt retention, periorbital edema, hypertension
- RBC casts and dysmorphic RBCs on UA
- NephrItic = Inflammatory
- Types
- IgA nephropathy (Berger’s disease)
- Most common cause of glomerulonephritis
- More common in young Asian males
- autoimmune
- Begins DAYS after onset of URI
- IgA is what lines the mucous membranes and intestines, acute illness leads to proliferation
- Look for history of coca cola colored urine following URI symptoms
- Membranoproliferative Glomerulonephritis
- Henoch-Sconlein Purpura
- IgA vasculitis
- classic tetrad: palpable purpura, abdominal pain, arthritis/arthralgias, renal disease
- treatment with steroids is controversial
- treatment focus is on hydration, rest, and analgesics
- Post-Streptococcal glomerulonephritis
- Begins weeks after strep infection
- usually occurs in kids, but can happen in adults
- get ASO titer
- Not prevented by antibiotics (unlike Rheumatic fever associated with strep)
- HTN treated with furosemide
- Rapidly Progressive glomerulonephritis
- progresses to renal failure in weeks to months
- Vasculitides such as Wegner’s, Henoch-Schonlein
- Goodpasture’s Syndrome
- Hematuria and pulmonary hemorrhage
- Hydrocarbon exposure and smoking can flare up disease
- Churg-Strauss (Eosinophilic Granulomatosis with Polyangiitis)
- association with asthma
- Wegner’s disease (Granulomatosis with polyangiitis)
- Wet
- Pulmonary hemorrhage
- ESRD
- Granuloma
- Wet
- Microscopic Polyangiitis
- IgA nephropathy (Berger’s disease)
- Types
- Management
- ABCs
- Some of these patients can present with devastating pulmonary hemorrhage and respiratory distress
- Loop diuretics and nitrates for pulmonary edema
- IV fluids if concern for hypovolemia, even if swelling present
- Loop or thiazide diuretics for HTN
- consider steroids
- mainstay of treatment for nephrotic syndrome, but response depends on the underlying cause
- mild disease may consider discharge with outpatient nephrology follow up
- ABCs
Thanks to Dr. Dissanayake for her amazing lecture, linked below!!