Nephritic syndrome
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
ICD-10 | N00., N01., N03., N05. |
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ICD-9 | 580 |
Nephritic syndrome is a collection of signs (known as a syndrome) associated with disorders affecting the kidneys, more specifically glomerular disorders.
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[edit] Signs and symptoms
Nephritic syndrome is characterized by proteinuria (protein in the urine), hematuria (blood in the urine), azotemia (elevated blood nitrogen), red blood cell (RBC) casts, oliguria (low urine output <400 mL/day) and hypertension (high blood pressure). The main features are hypertension and RBC casts. The proteinuria in nephritic syndrome is not severe, if it is severe the patient likely has a mix of nephritic syndrome and nephrotic syndrome.
Mnemonic: PHAROH = Proteinuria, Hematuria, Azotemia, RBC casts, Oliguria, Hypertension
[edit] Diagnosis
Nephritic syndrome is not a specific diagnosis. It is a clinical syndrome and characterized by the above signs.
An anti-streptolysin O titre (or ASOT) is typically done to test for exposure to streptococci.
[edit] Pathophysiology
The exact pathophysiology is dependent on the specific diagnosis. However, the common features are an inflammation of the glomeruli, leading to salt and water retention and a reduction in the kidney function.
[edit] Differential diagnosis
The two classic diagnoses of nephritic syndrome are:
- post-infectious glomerulonephritis - also sometimes called post-streptococcal glomerulonephritis as the streptococcus is the most common cause and at one time was thought to be the only cause.
- crescentic glomerulonephritis
Nephritic syndrome causes are usually grouped into 'focal proliferative' and 'diffuse proliferative' on the basis of histology (obtained by a renal biopsy).
[edit] Focal proliferative
- IgA nephropathy
- chronic liver failure
- Celiac sprue
- dermatitis herpetiformis
- Henoch-Schoenlein purpura
- Alport syndrome
- SLE
[edit] Diffuse proliferative
- focal glomerulosclerosis
- membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (malaria, hepatitis B, hepatitis C, chronic infection, sickle-cell disease, SLE, hemolytic uremic syndrome/thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura)
- cryoglobulinemia
- SLE
- rapidly progressing glomerulonephritis (RPGNs) - several.
[edit] Treatment
Treatment is dependent on the underlying etiology (cause).
[edit] Prognosis
Prognosis depends on the underlying etiology.
[edit] External links
- Acute nephritic syndrome - medlineplus.org
- Nephritic syndrome - A to Z topics.
- Nephritic syndrome - Merck Manual.