Subido por Enrique Vergara Kikimio

Nephropathy

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NEPHRITIC SYNDROMES
Rapidly progressive
Glomerulonephritis (RPGN)
(Following Goodpasteur’s
syndrome)
Berger disease (IgA
Nephropathy)
#1 most common
Typical Patient
Males 20-40 years
Males > Females
In Goodpasteur:
Antibodies Vs
Collagen IV α3
subunit
Adolescents after Gi
or upper resp
infection
Same day of mucosal
infection patient pees
blood
Membranoprolipherative
Glomerulonephritis (MPGN)
Low yield.
Type 1: “Tram track”
Type 2: C3 nephritic factor
Alport Syndrome (COL4A5
mutation)
X-linked dominant
Collagen IV α5 subunit defect
Children
Acute poststreptococcal
glomerulonephritis
In children after a
strep infection of skin
or pharynx
By S. pyogenes M12 infection
(but not the only one) (#1 in
children)
Clinical Features
Nephritic syndrome
that progresses to
renal failure in weeks
or months, may be
secondary to other
glomerulonephritis
Renal Biopsy
LM: Hypercelullarity, crescents, fibrin
deposits and macrophages, compressed
capillaries
IF: Smooth and linear pattern of IgG and C3
in BM.
EM: No deposits
Recurrent Gross
hematuria after
mucosal infection
Progresses to renal
failure in 25 years
LM: Mesangial prolipheration
IF: IgA immune complexes and C3 in
mesangium
EM: Immune complex deposits
Most common cause of
glomerulonephritis in
the world
Associated with Celiac
sprue and Henoch
Schönlein purpura
Nephritic or
nephrotic (or mixed)
CKD in 10 years
LM: Lobulated appearance of glomeruli,
splitting of BM: “Tram track” seen in silver
stain and PAS (+)
IF: Type 1: Gtanular pattern, C3 IgG, C1q
and C4 deposits. Type 2: Granular pattern,
C3 deposits.
EM: Type 1: Subendothelial and mesangial
immune complex deposits. Type 2: Dense
deposits in BM
LM: “Basketwave” appearance
IF: Clean
EM: Alternating thickening and thinning of
BM with splitting of lamina densa
Secondary to many
disorders (SLE,
endocarditis, HBV, HCV,
HIV, CLL)
Low serum C3
LM: Enlarged glomeruli and hypercellularity
IF: “Starry sky” granular appearance and
“Lumpy bumpy” IgG, IgM and C3 deposits
EM: Subepithelial immune complex humps
25% of adults progress
to RPGN
Associated with serum
DNAse B and high ASO
titers
“Can’t see, can’t pee,
can´t hear a bee”
Isolated hematuria,
ocular abnormalities
and sensorineural
deafness
Peripheral and
periorbital edema
with cola coloured
urine and
Hypertension
Image
Comments
Treat: Plasmapheresis,
steroids, sytotoxic drugs
Poor prognosis
Differentials:
Goodpasteurs (also
involves alveoli)
Wegener (cANCA/PR3-ANCA)
NEPHROTIC SYNDROMES
Minimal Change
dieseae (Lipoid
nephrosis or Nil
disease)
Primary Disorders
#1 Cause of
nephrotic
syndrome in
children
Clinical Features
Selective proteinuria (loss
only of albumin and
antithrombin III)
Renal Biopsy
LM: Lipid accumulation in proximal tubule
IF: No findings
EM: Effacement of podocytes
Overall, the filtration barrier loses
negative charge and allows albumin to be
filtrated
1st cause in
African
americans and
Hispanics
Poor response to steroids
LM: Focal segmental sclerosis and
hyalinization of glomeruli
IF: IgM, C1 and C3 deposits in sclerotic
segments
EM: Effacement of podocytes in
nonsclerotic regions and mesangial matrix
prolipheration in sclerotic regions
Membranous
glomerulonephritis
1st cause in
Caucasians
May regress
spontaneously
May progress to CKD
May cause persistent
proteinuria
LM: Thick glomerular membrane
IF: IgG and C3 subepithelial immune
complex deposits in granular and linear
pattern
EM: Subepithelial deposits in “Spike and
dome” in silver stain, effacement of
podocytes
Diabetic
glomerulonephritis
(Nodular
glomerulosclerosis)
Long term
diabetics
Efferent arteriole is more
affected, leading to high
GF pressure
Microalbuminuria that
may progress to nephrotic
syndrome
Hematuria
Nephritic/Nephrotic
syndrome
Hypertension
Renal failure
LM: Hyaline arteriolosclerosis, GBM
thickening, Kimmelstiel-Wilson nodules
Focal segmental
glomerulosclerosis
Secondary Disorders
Typical Patient
Children age 2-6
Associated with
Lipoprotein L1 allele
Systemic Lupus
Erithematosus
nephropathy
PAS (+)
Immune complexes deposit in glomeruli
Image
Comments
Most common nephrotic
syndrome in children
In adults it associates with
Hodgkin’s lymphoma
Good response to steroids
Etiology may be:
Ideopathic
IgA nephropathy
Sickle cell anemia
Heroin
AIDS
Obesity
Patients with kidney
transplant
Poor response to steroids
85% idiopathic. May associate
to:
HBV/HCV
Solid tumors (Lung/colon)
SLE
NSAID
Penicillamine
Poor response to steroids
ACEI slow down progression
because of efferent arteriole
dilation
NEPHROTIC SYNDROMES
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