Term
What are the four components to nephritic syndrome? |
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Definition
1) hematuria 2) azotemia 3) oliguria-Anuria 4) hypertension |
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Term
Define: nephritic syndrome |
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Definition
- constellation of symptoms seen with glomerular inflammation including, hematuria, hypertension, decreased ability to produce urine, and a variable degree of kidney failure
*proteinuria is NOT a main feature* |
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Term
What is the result of a urine sediment for a patient with nephritic syndrome? |
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Definition
1) "active" - inflammatory cells and blood, active glomerular inflammation |
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Term
What ist he underlying mechanism in all nephritic conditions? |
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Definition
1) injury to glomerular endothelium with complement activation and influx of inflammatory cells 2) most cases endothelial injury is related to immune phenomena |
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Term
What are the major immune phenomena observed that result in nephritic syndrome? |
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Definition
1) circulating immune complexes formed to systemic infection/active autoimmune disease; circulating antigen that is deposited and reacted to 2) circulating antibodies against glomerular basement membrane 3) circulating antibodies against neutrophils |
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Term
What are common primary glomerular disorders presenting as nephritis? |
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Definition
1) acute post-streptococcal glomerulonephritis (post-infectious) 2) membranoproliferative nephritis (MPGN) 3) crescentic glomerulonephritis (RPGN): anti-GBM disease, RPGN due to immune complex deposition, pauci-immune glomerulonephritis (ANCA associated) |
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Term
Describe acute post-streptococcal glomerulonephritis |
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Definition
1) immune complex depositions in the glomerulus (A-beta hemolytic streptococcus) 2) high ASO (antistreptolysis O) titers 3) inflammatory cells 4) hematuria 5) low USA incidence 6) can follow other bacterial, viral and parasitic infections (HepB) |
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Term
Describe the mechanism of the glomerular disease in Acute post-streptococcal glomerulonephritis |
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Definition
1) strep antigen circulates and is deposited 2) IgG reacts w/ antigen 3) complement activation 4) inflammatory cell influx 5) low complement levels; hematuria |
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Term
What are major types of post-infectious glomerulonephritis? |
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Definition
1) A-beta hemolytic streptococcus 2) Hep B 3) syphilis 4) infectious endocarditis 5) osteomyelitis 6) chronic pneumonia |
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Term
What are epidemiologic characteristics of membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis? |
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Definition
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Term
What are morphologic characteristics of membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis? |
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Definition
1) basement membrane abnormalities 2) influx of inflammatory cells |
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Term
What are characteristics of the pathogenesis of membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis |
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Definition
1) circulating antigen-antibody complexes are trapped 2) caomplement activation 3) antigenemia is prolonged (unlike post-infectious GN) 4) complexes slowly built and removed |
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Term
What are the most common causes of the antigens seen in membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis |
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Definition
1) life-long chronic infections: Hep C, Hep B, syphilis, HIV, malaria, other parasitic d/o 2) autoimmune chronic conditions: SLE, CVDs 2) malignancy: plasma cell neoplasms, lymphoma/leukemia |
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Term
What is the difference between Primary MPGN Type I and Type II? |
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Definition
1) Type I : diganosis of exclusion 2) Type II : does not reveal the subendothelial electrone dense deposits seen in MPGN-I, chronic immune complex deposition d/o w/ abnormal activation of complement |
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Term
Describe the prognosis of membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis |
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Definition
1) slow and progressive 2) 50% develop kidney failure w/in 10 years 3) recurs in transplanted kidneys 4) tx of underlying condition slows progression |
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Term
Describe crescentic glomerulonephritis |
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Definition
1) rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis (RPGN) - clinical diagnosis 2) glomerular crescents 3) anti-glomerular basement membrane disease; crescentic glomerulonephritis of immune complex deposition; crescentic glomerulonephritis of pauci-immune type |
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Term
Describe anti-gloerular basememnt membrane disease (RPGN subtype) |
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Definition
1) cellular glomerular crescents 2) no electron deposits 3) autoimmune d/o HLA-DR B1 w/ IgG-Col-IV moieties 4) Goodpasture's disease when pulmonary hemorrhage in addition to RPGN 5) rapid desctruction of glomeruli 6) Tx: plasmapheresis; cytotoxic agents |
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Term
Describe crescentic glomerulonephritis of immune complex deposition (RPGN subtype) |
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Definition
1) granular immune complexes in gapillary walls 2) large electron dense deposits 3) any type of immune complex GN: post-infectious GN, SLE, IgA nephropathy 3) vigorous active disease; poor prognosis 4) Tx: underlying disease |
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Term
Describe crescentic glomerulonephritis of Pauci-Immune Type |
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Definition
1) no immune complexes or basement membrane antibodies 2) no deposits 3) most common form of GN 4) ANCAs (c-ANCA; p-ANCA) 5) systemic disease 6) very aggressive 7) Tx: immunosuppressive Tx w/ cytotoxic medication |
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Term
What does c-ANCA refer to? p-ANCA? |
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Definition
1) anti-proteinase 3 2) anti-myeloperoxidase |
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Term
What are the major systemic disorders presenting with nephritis? |
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Definition
1) IgA nephropathy 2) Henoch-Schonlein Purpura 3) SLE |
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Term
Describe IgA Nephropathy/HSP? What is the general difference between the two? |
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Definition
1) characterized by IgA deposition 2) IgA-N: deposition in only the glomeruli; HSP: deposition in the systemic blood vessels |
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Term
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Definition
- deposition initially mesangial; mesangial cellularity - thickening of capillary walls w/ membrane splitting - cellular crescents - segmental or global scarring - IgA, C3, IgG deposits - electron dense deposits - unknown cause - most common world-wide cause of glomerular disease: male, Asia - slowly progressing - Tx: NO TX |
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Term
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Definition
- systemic deposition of IgA in small vessels - young children - single episode of purpura is common - persistent kidney disease is infrequent |
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Term
What are the major mechanisms that play a role in the pathogenesis of IgA nephropathy and HSP |
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Definition
1) abnormal mucosal immune response secodary to antigenic stimulation 2) genetic predisposition 3) abnormal IgA molecules w/ altered structure 4) defective clearance of IgA molecules from serum by the liver |
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Term
Describe the deposits seen in Lupus nephritis |
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Definition
- large granular depositions of all classes of Ig's and complement: IgG, IgM, IgA, C3, C4, C1q = "full house" = characteristic of lupus nephritis |
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Term
Describe class I lupus nephritis |
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Definition
1) no kidney involvement or minimal mesangial lupus nephritis - unremarkable glomeruli - normal kidney fxn |
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Term
describe class II lupus nephritis |
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Definition
- mesangial proliferative lupus nephritis - hematuria and proteinuria - mildly reduced kidney function - glomerular mesangioproliferative ghanges - full house deposits |
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Term
describe class III (focal) and IV (diffuse) lupus nephritis |
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Definition
- proliferative nephritis - presence of active lesions - full house immune complex deposition - dense deposits |
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Term
What are examples of active lesions seen in classIII and IV lupus nephritis? |
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Definition
- endocapillary proliferation - necrosis - neutrophilic infiltrates - wire loops - membrane breaks - crescents - hyaline thrombi - fibrin deposition |
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Term
Describe class V lupus nephritis |
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Definition
- membranous lupus nephritis - resembles MN - full house immune depositions - subepithelial depositions - active SLE - less aggressive |
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Term
Describe class VI lupus nephritis |
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Definition
- advanced sclerosing lupus - kidney failure - diffuse and global glomerulosclerosis |
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