Term
Name the tubulointerstitial diseases |
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Definition
- nephritis- inflammatory rxns
- acute tubular necrosis leading to renal failure- ischemic or toxic injury
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Term
clinical/histological entity of acute tubular necrosis |
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Definition
- histology- destruction of tubular epithelial cells
- clinically- suppression of renal function
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Term
Two situations causing acute tubular necrosis |
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Definition
- renal ischemia (rarely marked, frequently not seen)
- toxic injury (MORE COMMON)
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Term
Conditions leading to ischemic acute tubular nephropathy |
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Definition
- think anything that results in decreased renal perfusion (associated with hypovolemia and shock)
- surgical procedures
- extensive trauma/burns
- pancreatitis
- rhabdomyolysis
- septicemia
- marked hemolysis (as seen in hemolytic transfusion rxns)
- obstetric complications
- heat stroke
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Term
Clinical progression of ischemic acute tubular necrosis |
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Definition
- followed by prolonged period of prerenal azotemia
- loss of ability to concentrate urine
- elevated urine sodium
- onset usually symptomatic as oliguria (can be present without it though)
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Term
ischemic acute tubular necrosis: pathogenesis |
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Definition
- ischemic damage to tubules causes tubular dysfunction, with backleak of filtered compounds into the tubular interstitium
- epithelial cells may slough into tubular lumen and form casts which increase pressure within Bowman's space, thus decreasing GFR
- intrarenal vasoconstriction may be stimulated, further decreasing glomerular filtration pressure
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Term
ischemic acute tubular necrosis: lab values |
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Definition
- elevated serum BUN and creatinine
- urinalysis
- nonselective proteinuria
- +/- mild hematuria
- hyaline and granular casts
- urine chemistry
- SG>serum SG
- sodium and FENA are elevated
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Term
ischemic acute tubular necrosis: gross pathology |
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Definition
- enlarged kidneys
- kidneys tense pale
- on section
- parenchyma appears to bulge out of capsule
- cortex is pale and medula is dark with exaggeration of corticomedullary junction
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Term
ischemic acute tubular necrosis: microscopic pathology |
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Definition
necrosis of individual tubular cells, irregular spacing of epithelial cells, dropout of cells from tubules are characteristic of ATN
- minimal glomerular changes
- capillary tufts collapsed and bloodle3ss
- urinary space somewhat expanded
- parietal epithelial cells of Bowman's capsule may become tall and cuboidal (tubularization)
- PCT dilated with flattening of individual epithelial cells and loss of brush border (distalization)
- lumina with eosinophilc debris
- DCT's similar changes to PCT with dilation of lumina and flattening of epithelial cells, with cell casts often present (most hyaline and PAS positive)
- sloughed cells and cell fragments may be present in tubular lumina
- rare peritubular granulomas
- interstitium edematous
- appears as pale and loose CT between widely spaced tubules
- inflammatory cells are scant (but present)
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Term
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Definition
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Term
toxic ATN: clinical and pathological features |
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Definition
- similar to ischemic ATN
- changes can be more subtle and closely resemble ischemic ATN depending on toxin
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Term
prognosis, tx of toxic ATN |
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Definition
- tx- supportive
- peritoneal dialysis or hemodialysis in severe cases until tubular function returns\
- prognosis- depends on status of other organs and control of complications (ex: infection)
- renal failure generally lasts 1-2 weeks
- likelihood of recovery diminishes after 4-6 weeks
- poor prognostic signs- advanced age, multisystem organ failure, prolonged renal impairment, severe oliguria
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Term
differential diagnosis for acute tubular necrosis |
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Definition
anything that causes acute renal failure (by convention, glomerulonephritis overrules dx of ATN since some of the same cchanges can be seen in severe glomerular disease) |
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Term
tubulointerstitial nephritis: classifications |
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Definition
- primary
- secondary (glomerular disease, vascular disorders, cystic disorders, metabolic disorders)
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Term
primary tubulointerstitial nephritis: definition and types (histopathology in the different types) |
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Definition
- definition- absence of hallmarks of glomerular injury
- presence of defect in tubular function
- acute
- interstitial edema
- leukocyte infiltrate
- focal tubular necrosis
- chronic
- infiltration with mononuclear cells
- prominent interstitial fibrosis
- widespread tubular atrophy
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Term
pyelonephritis: what parts of kidney it affects, types and their specific causes |
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Definition
- affects tubules, interstitium, renal pelvis
- acute
- bacterial
- associated with UTI
- chronic
- bacterial infection and other factors
- vesico-ureteral reflex
- obstruction
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Term
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Definition
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Term
UTI: ascending infection (etiologies) |
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Definition
- most common cause of pyelonephritis
- bacteria introduced into bladder will multiple in the presence of stasis in case of bladder dysfunction/ obstruction
- incompetence of vesicoureteral valve allow bacteria to ascend to ureter into pelvis
- intrarenal reflux to upper and lower pole of kidney
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Term
UTI: hematogenous spread (etiologies and causative agents) |
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Definition
- ureteral obstruction
- immunosuppressed patient
- causative agents- nonenteric organisms (S. aureus and fungi)
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Term
morphology of acute pyelonephritis |
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Definition
- patchy interstitial suppurative inflammation (focal abscess or coalescent areas)
- early limited to interstitium then involves and destroys tubules producing tubular necrosis
- extends along the involved nephrons and collecting tubules
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Term
complications of acute pyelonephritis |
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Definition
- papillary necrosis
- epidemiology: diabetcis with UTI's
- characteristics
- usually bilateral
- distal 2/3 of pyramid gray-white to yeellow
- microscopy- coagulative infarct necrosis
- leukocytic response at junction of viable tissue
- pyeonephrosis
- associated wtih complete obstruction
- microscopy- suppurative exudate fills pelvic calyceal system
- perinephric abscess
- suppurative inflammation through renal capsule into perinephric tissue
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Term
healing phase of pyelonephritis: microscopy |
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Definition
- mononuclear infiltrate replaces the neutrophilic infiltrate
- scar and interstitial fibrosis
- tubular atrophy
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Term
clinical course of acute pyelonephritis |
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Definition
- pain at CV angle- bladder symptoms and systemic evidence of infection
- uncomplicated pyelonephritis resolves with antibiotics
- persistent bacteriuria may lead to repeated episodes
- papillary necrosis may lead to acute renal failure
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Term
chronic pyelonephritis: definition, forms |
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Definition
- definition- chronic tubulointerstitial inflammation and renal scarring with pathologic involvement of the calyces and pelvis
- two forms
- chronic obstructive pyelonephritis
- chronic reflux nephropathy
- important cause of end stage renal disease
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Term
chronic pyelonephritis: gross morphology |
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Definition
- irregularly scarred kidneys
- coarse, discrete corticomedullary scar overlying dilated deformed calyx
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Term
chronic pyelonephritis: microscopic appearance |
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Definition
- mixed tubular atrophy and hypertrophy
- variable interstitial inflammation and fibrosis
- periglomerular fibrosis, ischemic fibrous obliteration
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Term
chronic pyelonephritis: clinical course |
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Definition
- gradual onset of renal insufficiency and HTN
- bacteruria and pyuria
- radiographically irregularly contracted scarred kidneys
- proteinuria
- glomerulosclerosis
- end stage renal disease
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Term
Mechanism of tubulointerstitial nephritis induced by drugs and toxins |
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Definition
- interstitial immunologic reactions
- acute renal failure
- subtle cummulative injury to tubules
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Term
acute drug induced interstitial nephritis associated with what drugs |
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Definition
- sulfonamides
- synthetic antibiotics and penicillins
- NSAIDs
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Term
Acute drug induced interstitial nephritis: clinical course, symptoms |
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Definition
- onset 2 weeks after exposure to drug
- symptoms
- fever
- eosinophilia
- rash
- renal abnormalities- hematuria, proteinuria, leukocyturia
- rising creatinine or acute renal failure
- immune mechanism
- withdrawal of offending drug is followed by recovery
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Term
acute drug induced interstitial nephritis: microscopic pathology |
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Definition
- interstitial edema
- mononuclear infiltrate
- eosinophils and PMN's
- sometimes granulomas
- tubular necrosis and regeneration
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Term
analgesic abuse nephropathy: definitions, signs/symptoms |
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Definition
- definition- chronic renal disease caused by excessive intake of analgesic mixtures (precipitated by injusting a mixture of at least two of the antipyretic analgesics)
- phenacetin
- aspirin
- caffeine
- acetaminophen
- codeine
- symptoms
- headache
- anemia
- GI symptoms
- HTN
UTI
- inability to concentrate urine (early sign)
- hematuria, renal colic (excreted papillae)
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Term
analgesic abuse nephropathy: microscopic pathology |
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Definition
- tubulointerstitial nephritis with renal papillary necrosis
- papillae with various stages of necrosis
- loss and atrophy of tubules secondary to damaged papillae
- interstitial fibrosis and inflammation
- analgesic microangiopathy
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Term
analgesic abuse nephropathy: gross appearance |
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Definition
- kidneys normal or slightly reduced in size
- cortex display depressed areas and raised areas
- papillae with various stages of necrosis
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Term
analgesic abuse nephropathy: tx |
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Definition
drug withdrawl stabilizes/improves renal function |
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Term
nephropathy associated with NSAID's: clinical consequence and microscopy |
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Definition
- clinical consequence: hemodynamically induced acute renal failure
- microscopy
- acute HS interstitial nephritis
- acute interstitial neprhitis and lipoid nephrosis
- membrane glomerulonephritis
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Term
urate nephropathy: cause and clinical consequences |
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Definition
- cause- acute precipitation of uric acid crystals
- clinical consequences
- chronic precipitation of crystals (gouty tophus)
- neprholithiasis (uric acid stones)
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