syndromology in nephrology

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Syndromology in nephrology Martina Peiskerová 1.LF UK Praha Klinika nefrologie 9/2007

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Syndromology in nephrology. Martina Peiskerová 1.LF UK Praha Klinika nefrologie 9/2007. Haematuria Proteinuria Leucocyturia Polyuria, oliguria, anuria Nephrotic syndrome Nephritic syndrome Acute glomerulonephritis Rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis Pulmonary-renal syndromes. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Syndromology in nephrology

Syndromology in nephrology

Martina Peiskerová 1.LF UK Praha

Klinika nefrologie 9/2007

Page 2: Syndromology in nephrology

Syndromology in nephrology - outline

• Haematuria• Proteinuria• Leucocyturia

• Polyuria, oliguria, anuria

• Nephrotic syndrome • Nephritic syndrome

• Acute glomerulonephritis• Rapidly progressive

glomerulonephritis • Pulmonary-renal syndromes

• Chronic glomerulonephritis ??

• Acute renal failure• Chronic kidney disease• (Chronic renal failure)• Uraemia

• Tubular syndromes

• Hypertension• Pain • Obstruction

Page 3: Syndromology in nephrology

Haematuria• Definition > 2 red cells / hpf , • Hamburger’s sediment (3 hours) > 2000/min.

• microscopic x macroscopic • persitent x transient (exercise, menstruation, trauma,

infection)• glomerular x non-glomerular x uncertain origin (exercise,

over-anticoagulation, factitious)

• Source: kidney x urinary tract– Renal glomerular haematuria (IgA GN, thin basement memrane

disease, Alport, other GN) – Renal non-glomerular haematuria (tumours, cysts, calculs,

pyelonephritis, papillary necrosis, renal vein thrombosis) – Urinary tract bleeding (cystitis, prostate, tumours, stricture,

Schistosoma haematobium)

Page 4: Syndromology in nephrology

Clinical importance of haematuria• Cause dependent• The most frequent causes: - inflammation or infection of the prostate or urinary bladder

– urinary calculi– malignant neoplasms– glomerular disorders

• Risk of malignity: age >40, smoking, NSA, pelvic irradiation, CFA treatment)

• Glomerular disorder more likely if:– proteinuria > 0.5 g/24h– dysmorphic erythrocytes present and red blood cells casts on

phase-contrast microscopy– ↑BP

Page 5: Syndromology in nephrology

Diagnosis of haematuria - history and physical examination

• Pyuria or dysuria urinary tract infection• Respiratory tract infection postinfectious GN,

IgA nephropathy• Family history polycystic kidney disease,

hereditary nephritides• Low back pain ureteral obstruction• Physical exercise, injury post-exercise/post-

traumatic hematuria• Micturition disorders in older men prostatic

obstruction • History of bleeding from multiple sources

coagulation disorder

Page 6: Syndromology in nephrology

Phase-contrast microscopy

• A-dysmorphic erythrocytes

• B-isomorphic erythrocytes

• C-acanthocytes• (spur / spiny /

star cells)• D- neutrophils• E-lymphocytes• F-eosinophils

(arrow),

Page 7: Syndromology in nephrology

Diagnosis + Treatment of haematuria

• Urinalysis• Urine microscopy (sediment, phase-contrast)• PSA

• Imaging (US, IVU,CT, angiography)• Cystoscopy• Urine cytology

• Renal biopsy (in glomerular hematuria)

• Early diagnosis is essential• Treatment of the causing disorder

Page 8: Syndromology in nephrology

Proteinuria

• benign (<1g/day, age < 30, fever, cold, exercise, CCF, seizures, postural), vs. pathological

• importance of abnormal proteinuria:

marker of intrinsic renal disease, prognostic factor for progression of renal insufficiency, risk factor for CV mortality, treatment target in CKD

• normally < 150 mg/day (albumine < 30 mg/ day)• microalbuminuria 30-300 mg/day

Page 9: Syndromology in nephrology

Proteinuria 2Pathophysiology • glomerular (mostly albumin), • tubular (beta2microglobulin), • overflow (light chains in myeloma),• secretory (tumour, inflammation)

Quantity• Mild < 1,0 g/day• Significant 1,0 – 3,5 g/day (probably glomerular)• Nephrotic range > 3,5 g/day (probably glomerular)

Page 10: Syndromology in nephrology

Leucocyturia

• neutrophiles – infection, GN, TIN• sterile pyuria (treated UTI, Chlamydia, calculi,

prostatitis, bladder tumor, papillary necrosis, TIN, TB)

• lymphocytes – TIN

Active urinary sediment• red blood cells, proteinuria, white blood cells,

and "casts" of cells

Page 11: Syndromology in nephrology

Urinary sediment abnormalities„Mixed urinary findings“

• isolated haematuria or haematuria + mild proteinuria (<1g/day) … good prognosis

• isolated proteinuria (<3,5g/day) .. worse prognosis

• nephrotic proteinuria + haematuria … the worst prognosis

Page 12: Syndromology in nephrology

Nephrotic syndrome= clinical complex consisting of:

• Proteinuria of >3.5g / 1.73m2 / 24 hours

• Hypoalbuminaemia

• Oedema

• Hyperlipidaemia

• Lipiduria

• Hypercoagulability

Page 13: Syndromology in nephrology

Patophysiology of the nephrotic syndrome. Primary insult- increased glomerular permeability, causing plasma protein leakage into urine. Hypoalbuminemia is the cause of the main clinical features.

Page 14: Syndromology in nephrology

Metabolic albumin turnover in healthy subjects vs. subjects with nephrotic syndrome.

Page 15: Syndromology in nephrology

The “underfill” mechanism of edema formation. In this theory, hypovolemia (caused by hypoalbuminemia and decreased oncotic plasma pressure) is the main cause of renal Na+ a H20 retention.

??

Page 16: Syndromology in nephrology

The “overfill” mechanism of edema formation. In this theory, abnormal renal Na+ and H20 retention is the main cause of Starling forces alteration at local tissue level.

??

Page 17: Syndromology in nephrology

(Possible) consequences of proteinuria and lipid spectrum abnormalities.

Page 18: Syndromology in nephrology

Diagram showing pathogenetic factors leading to hypercoagulability, tromboembolism and renal vein thrombosis.

Page 19: Syndromology in nephrology

Causes of nephrotic syndrome

Page 20: Syndromology in nephrology

Treatment of nephrotic syndrome• Symptomatic

– NaCl, H20 restriction

– diuretic therapy

– ultrafiltration

– nephrectomy

• Specific (depending on the causative disease)– immunosuppressive

therapy

– in amyloidosis, treatment of the causative process

• Treatment and prevention of complications• thromboembolism

• lipid metabolism disturbances

• immunoglobulin deficiency

• Ineffective: high protein diets, albumin supplementation.

Page 21: Syndromology in nephrology

Nephritic syndrome

Glomerular inflammatory changes leading to• ↓ GFR • moderate proteinuria • oedema• hypertension • haematuria (red cell casts).

Typical example: Poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis in children

Page 22: Syndromology in nephrology

Differences between nephrotic and nephritic syndromes

Typical features Nephrotic syndrome Nephritic syndrome

onset slow acute

swelling ++++ ++

arterial blood pressure normal increased

central venous pressure normal/low increased

proteinuria ++++ ++

hematuria present/not present +++

red cell casts not present present

glomerular filtration normal normal/low

serum albumin low normal/slightly decreased

Page 23: Syndromology in nephrology

Histology (light microscopy) of acute poststreptococcal GN (marked invasion of polymorphonuclear cells)

Page 24: Syndromology in nephrology

Histology of acute poststreptococcal GN (subepithelial hump-like deposits (strait arrows), subendothelial (arched arrows) and mesangial deposits). Endocapillary hypercellularity caused by neutrophil infiltration, endothelial and mesangial proliferation.

Page 25: Syndromology in nephrology

Immunological findings in poststreptococcal GN

1. The serial estimation of complement - • Early in the acute phase, the levels of hemolytic

complement activity (CH50 and C3) reduced. • Within 8 weeks return to normal

2. Serial ASO titer measurements - twofold or greater rise in titer are highly indicative of a recent infection.

Page 26: Syndromology in nephrology

Continuous alterations of structural changes caused by glomerular inflammation (upper part), clinical syndromes (middle part) and specific nosologic units (lower part).

Page 27: Syndromology in nephrology

Rapidly progressive GN (RPGN)• Severe glomerular disorder → ↓ glomerular filtration in

days or weeks. • Clinical features: acute uremic or nephritic syndrome with

renal insufficiency rapidly → renal failure• Histology: negative IF (pauci-immune), crescentic GN

(crescent = half-moon-shaped lesion in Bowman’s space composed of proliferating parietal epithelial cells and infiltrating monocytes). Crescentic GN: >70% glomeruli are involved.

• Typical diseases : WG, GP and SLE.• + Extrarenal symptoms: pulmonary, skin, ORL, CNS..

Page 28: Syndromology in nephrology

Large cellular crescent filling the Bowman’s space and compressing the glomerular tuft in WG.

Page 29: Syndromology in nephrology

Acute renal failure 1• due to rapid ↓ GFR (hours, days)• retention of urea, creatinine, disorders in electrolytes, acid-base,

fluid homeostasis• oliguric x non-oliguric• anuria < 100 ml/day, oliguria < 400 ml/day, polyuria > 3l/day

• RIFLE classification Risk.. Injury…Failure.. Loss…End-stage)• Acute kidney injury classification : 1. s-creat to 1,5-2x baseline / oliguria > 6 hours 2. s-creat to 2-3x baseline / oliguria > 12 hours 3. s-creat above 3x baseline / anuria

* the highest risk – pulmonary edema, hyperkalemia

Page 30: Syndromology in nephrology

Acute renal failure 2 - causes• Prerenal (from ↓ BP → ↓ GFR, or arterial stenosis or

NSA, ACEI)• Intrinsic - ATN (ischemic – e.g.myoglobinuria, myeloma casts, nephrotoxic – radiocontrast, drugs – gentamicin, vancocin, cisplatin) - vascular - acute GN - acute TIN• Postrenal (obstructive)

• Patients at risk of developping ARF: ↑age, DM, pre-existing renal disease, surgery, volume depletion, cardiac disease, cirrhosis, drugs – NSA, ACEI, ARB), myeloma

Page 31: Syndromology in nephrology

Chronic kidney disease → Renal insufficiency → Renal failure

* exocrine dysfunction (ions – K, Na, P, H.., fluid, and other catabolites – uremic toxins retention)

• endocrine dysfunction (erythropoietin, 1,25 vitamin D metabolism, renin-angiotensin system)

→ laboratory: GF < 1,0 ml/s, hyperkalemia, hypocalcemia, hyperphosphatemia, metabolic acidosis, anemia

Page 32: Syndromology in nephrology

Stages of kidney disease NKF/ KDOQI

1. Asymptomatic urinary abnormalities: GFR > 90 ml/min (> 1,5 ml/s)

2 Mild CRF: GFR 60-89 ml/min (1-1,5 ml/s)

3 Moderate CRF: GFR 30-59 ml/min (0,5-1 ml/s)

4 Severe CRF: GFR 15-29% (0,25-0,5 ml/s)

5 Approaching ESRD: GFR < 15 ml/min (< 0,25 ml/s)

Page 33: Syndromology in nephrology

Uremic syndrome - clinical features 1

• Gastrointestinal – Anorexia, nausea, vomiting

• Neurological– Central: uremic encefalopathy (daytime

drowsiness, disorientation, myoclonus, coma)– Peripheral: uremic polyneuropathy (restless legs

syndrome)• Respiratory

– pulmonary edema

Page 34: Syndromology in nephrology

Uremic syndrome - clinical features 2

• Cardiac– uremic pericarditis

• Dermatological– pruritus

• Hematological– fatigue due to anemia

• Endocrinological– secondary hyperparathyreoidism (bone pain),

dysmenorrhea

Page 35: Syndromology in nephrology

Uremia

* in 3 different clinical situations → different clinical

features– acute renal failure – exocrine dysfunction, no time

for endocrine dysfunction development– chronic renal failure – endocrine and exocrine renal

dysfunction (fluid excretion usually preserved until late stages)

– dialysis treated CRF –caused by insufficient dialysis treatment and/or insufficient substitution of the decreased renal endocrine production (EPO, vitamin D, etc.).

Page 36: Syndromology in nephrology

Treatment of uremia• Conservative:

- diet: Na, K, PO3 and protein restriction

- control of hypertension

- NaHC03 treatment to reduce metabolic acidosis

- anemia management (erythropoietin)

- secondary hyperparathyroidism management (vitamin D, phosphate binders)

• Renal replacement therapy: hemodialysis, peritoneal dialysis, renal transplantation

Page 37: Syndromology in nephrology

Pulmonary-renal syndromes• Acute kidney disease (ARF or RPGN) + Pulmonary

haemmorhage• Features: cough, anaemia, dyspnoea, haemoptysis,

hypoxaemia, alveolar shadowing on CXR (df.dg. pulmonary oedema) + features of systemic disease: skin rush, sinusitis, artritis, fever, fatigue

• Main causes: ANCA vasculitis, antiGBM nephritis, SLE, Henoch-Schonlein purpura

• Other causes: pulmonary oedema, infection (pneumonia – Pneumocystis, viruses..), hantavirus, pulmonary emboli, acute respiratory distress syndrome

Page 38: Syndromology in nephrology

Hypertension

• Primary hypertension – kidney is victim –

- vascular nephrosclerosis..

• Secondary hypertension – kidney is vilain

- glomerular and vascular diseases

• Control of hypertension is crucial in slowing progression of kidney disease → aim BP 120/75 mm Hg

Page 39: Syndromology in nephrology

Tubular syndromesTubular dysfunction may occur in any renal injury

Tubular syndromes in the context of normal GFR:• Generalised – Fanconi syndrome : multiple tubular defects caus in variable degree → phosphaturia → rickets, osteomalacia, osteoporosis → aminoaciduria – no clinical sequelae → glycosuria – rarely hypoglycemia → defective bicarbonate reabsorption – renal tubular acidosis → Na loss → rarely ↓BP or metabolic alcalosis → K loss → hypokalaemia → muscle weakness, constipation, arrhytmias → proteinuria – LMW, no clinical sequelae → polyuria – dehydration → hypercalciuria → rarely nephrolitihiasis/calcinosis

• Isolated – genetic mechanisms involved - glycosuria - to distinguish from DM - aminoaciduria - e.g. cystinuria → recurrent cystin stone formation (AR inheritance) - phosphaturia – e.g. vitamin D resistant rickets (XR inheritance)

Page 40: Syndromology in nephrology

PainAn agressive and destructive renal disease may be

painless !!

Loin pain - constant dull ache, may irradiate to abdomen, genitalia• cause: distension of the renal capsule• differential: nerve root irritation (T10-12) Ureteric colic - sudden onset, extremely sever, pale, distressed patient• localisation: loin, iliac fossa, genitalia, upper thigh• cause: passage of the stone, blood clot or necrotic papillae

Suprapubic pain • causes: over-distension of the bladder, cystitis, bladder cancer

Bladder irritability - dysuria, frequency, urgency• causes: over-distension of the bladder, cystitis

Page 41: Syndromology in nephrology

Bladder outflow obstructionSymptoms• Obstructive – voiding: hesitancy, impaired force of stream,

incomplete emptying• Storage – filling : frequency, dysuria, urgency

Causes• Structural – prostatic hyperplasia, carcinoma, urethral

stricture

• Functional – bladder neck dyssynergia, DM, multiple sclerosis, spinal corde lesions, drugs - antidepressants