Zusammenfassung der Ressource
haematuria
- urine red in colour or tests +ve for Hb on urine sticks
- examine under microscope to confirm haematuria
- (>10 RBC per high power field)
- glomerular haematuria
- suggested by
- presence of brown urine
- presence of deformed RBCs
- pass through basement mb
- casts
- often accomp by proteinuria
- causes
- non-glomerular
- infection
- bacterial
- UTI
- commonest cause
- TB
- viral
- schistosomiasis
- trauma to genitalia, urinary tract or kidneys
- stones
- tumours
- sickle
cell
disease
- bleeding
disorders
- renal vein
thrombosis
- hypercalciuria
- glomerular
- acute glomerulonephritis (usually w/ proteinuria)
- chronic glomerulonephritis (usually w/ proteinuria)
- IgA nephropathy
- familial nephritis e.g. Alport syn
- thin
basement
mb disease
- hx &
examn
may
suggest
diag
- lower urinary tract haematuria
- usually red
- occurs @ beginning & end of stream
- not
accomp by
proteinuria
- unusual in
kids
- Ix
- all
patients
- urine
microscopy (w/
phase
contrast) &
culture
- protein & Ca excretion
- kidney & UT US
- plasma urea,
electrolytes,
Cr, Ca2+,
PO4 2-,
albumin
- FBC, platelets,
clotting screen,
sickle cell screen
- if suggestive of glomerular haematuria
- ESR, complement
levels & anti-DNA
antibodies
- throat swab &
antistreptolysin O/
anti-DNAse B
titres
- hepatitis B & C
screen
- renal biopsy if
indicated
- indicated if
- sig persistent proteinuria
- recurrent macroscopic haematuria
- abnormal renal function
- complement levels
persistently abnormal
- test mum's
urine for
blood
- if
?Alport
syn
- hearing
test
- if ?Alport syn
- acute nephritis
- post-infectious (incl strep)
- usually follows strep sore throat or skin infection
- diag by evidence of recent
strep infection + low C3 levels
that return to normal after 3-4
weeks
- evidence of strep infection
- culture of org
- raised ASO/anti-DNAse B titres
- common in developing countries
- good long term prognosis
- vasculitis
- Henoch Schonlein purpura
- combo of ff features
- characteristic skin
rash
- arthralgia
- periarticular
oedema
- abdo pain
- glomerulonephritis
- occurs
3-10
years old
- 2x common
in boys
- peaks in winter months
- often
preceded
by upper
resp
infection
- cause unknown
- thought that genetic predisposition & antigen exposure increase circulating IgA levels & disrupt IgG prod
- IgA & IgG interact to make complexes that activate complement
- complexes deposited in affected organs
- ppting inflamm response w/ vasculitis
- clinical findings
- presentation
- fever
- rash
- symmetrical
- site
- buttocks
- extensor surfaces of arms & legs
- ankles
- trunk spared unless lesions induced by trauma
- initially urticarial quickly becoming maculopapular & purpuric
- characteristically palpable
- can recur over several weeks
- 1st clinical sign
- & cornerstone of diag (clinical)
- joint
pain
- in 2/3rds of pts
- esp of knees & ankles
- periarticular
oedema
- no long
term
damage
to joints
- sx resolve before rash goes
- colicky
ado
pain
- common
- if severe treat w/ corticosteroids
- GI petechiae->
- haematemesis
- melaena
- intussuception possible
- rare complications
- ileus
- protein-losing enteropathy
- orchitis
- CNS involvement
- renal involvement
- common
- but rarely 1st
sx
- 80% have
micro/macroscopic
haematuria or mild
proteinuria
- usually
completely
recover
- if
proteinuria
more
severe->
nephrotic
syn
- risk factors
for
progressive
renal
disease
- heavy
proteinuria
- oedema
- hypertension
- deteriorating
renal function
- if present,
renal
biopsy to
determine if
rx
necessary
- follow up for 1 yr
- to detect those w/
persisting urinary
abnormalities (5=10%)
- vital because HTN & declining
renal func may develop after period of
several years
- commonest
vasculitis to
involve
kidneys
- rarely
- Wegener
granulomatosis
- fever
- malaise
- weight
loss
- skin
rash
- arthropathy
- prominent
involvement of
resp tract
- microscopic
polyarteritis
- polyarteritis nodosa
- renal arteriography
- presence of aneurysms
- antineutrophil
cytoplasm
antibodies
(ANCA) present
& diagnostic of
these
- renal involvement
severe & rapidly
progressive
- Mx
- steroids
- plasma exchange
- iv cyclophosphamide
- SLE
- presentation mainly in teenage
girls & young women
- commoner in Asians &
Afro-Caribbeans than
Caucasians
- characterised by presence of multiple antibodies
- antibodies to dsDNA
- low C3 & C4, esp during active phases
- haematuria & proteinuria present
- renal biopsy
- immunosuppression
always needed &
intensity depends on
severity of renal
involvement
- IgA nephropathy
- presentation
- episodes of macroscopic haematuria
- often in assoc w/ upper resp tract infections
- histological findings & Mx like HSP
- HSP probably a variant of same pathological process but not restricted to kidney
- prognosis in kids better than adults
- mesangiocapillary
glomerulonephritis
- anti-glomerular basement mb disease (Goodpasture syn)
- very rare
- increased glomerular
cellularity restricts
glomerular blood flow, so
filtration reduced. ->
- decreased urine output & vol overload
- oedema, characteristically periorbital
- HTN, which may cause seizures
- haematuria & proteinuria
- Mx
- attention to water & electrolyte balance
- diuretics if needed
- renal biopsy fb immunosuppression & plasma exchange
- to prevent irreversible renal failure
- may be rapid deterioration in renal func (rapidly progressive
glomerulonephritis)
- can occur w/ any cause but
uncommon if
post-streptococcal cause
- if untreated-> irreversible renal failure over weeks & months
- familial nephritis
- Alport syndrome
- commonest type of FN
- X-linked recessive
- progressive to end stage renal failure by early adult life in males
- assoc w/ nerve deafness & ocular defects
- mum may have haematuria