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Nephrotic syndrome

Nephrotic syndrome is a disorder where the kidneys have been damaged, causing them to leak protein from the blood into the urine. It is a fairly benign disease when it occurs in childhood, but may lead on to chronic renal failure, especially in adults, or be a sign of an underlying serious disease such as systemic lupus erythematosus or a malignancy. more...

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Signs and symptoms

  • The most common sign is excess fluid in the body. This may take several forms:
    • Puffiness around the eyes, characteristically in the morning.
    • Edema over the legs which is pitting (i.e. leaves a little pit when the fluid is pressed out, which resolves over a few seconds).
    • Fluid in the pleural cavity causing pleural effusion.
    • Fluid in the peritoneal cavity causing ascites.
  • Thrombosis
  • High levels of cholesterol (hypercholesterolemia)
  • Renal failure
  • Hypertension (rarely)
  • Some patients may notice foamy urine, due to a lowering of the specific gravity by the high amount of proteinuria. (Actual urinary complaints such as hematuria, or oliguria are uncommon, and seen often in nephritic syndrome.)
  • Hypoalbuminemia

Diagnosis

Other causes of edema are congestive heart failure and cirrhosis. High urine levels of protein can readily be detected with a dipstick. The best way to make a diagnosis is to quantify the amount of protein in a 24-hour urine sample or a random albumin to creatinine ratio (ACR). A diagnosis of nephrotic syndrome requires more than 3.5 grams of proteinuria per 1.73 square metre surface area in adults. Additional components of the nephrotic syndrome include hypercholesterolemia and low serum albumin levels.

Pathogenesis

The glomeruli of the kidneys are the parts that normally filter the blood. They consist of capillaries that are fenestrated (leaky, due to little holes called fenestrae or windows) and that allow fluid, salts, and other small solutes to flow through, but normally not proteins.

In nephrotic syndrome, the glomeruli become damaged due to diabetes, glomerulonephritis, or even prolonged hypertension (high blood pressure) so that small proteins, such as albumin can pass through the kidneys into urine.

Nephrotic syndrome is characterised by proteinuria (detectable protein in the urine), and low albumin levels in blood plasma. As a compensation, the liver begins to make more of all its proteins, and levels of large proteins (such as alpha 2-macroglobulin) increase.

Edema usually occurs due to salt and water retention by the diseased kidneys as well as sometimes due to the reduced colloid oncotic pressure (because of reduced albumin in the plasma). Cholesterol levels are also increased, and though the mechanism isn't fully understood, it is thought to be due to the increased synthesis of lipoproteins in the liver. There is an increased tendency for thrombosis (up to 25%), perhaps due to urinary loss of inhibitors of clotting such as antithrombin III.

Similar loss of immunoglobulins increases the risks of infections and relevant immunisation is recommended against pneumococcus, Haemophilus influenzae, and meningococcus.

Read more at Wikipedia.org


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Underlying malignancy and nephrotic syndrome
From American Family Physician, 5/1/89

Underlying Malignancy and Nephrotic Syndrome Previous studies have shown that nephrotic syndrome in adults may indicate underlying malignancy. Approximately 70 percent of cancer-related renal lesions consist of membranous glomerulonephritis. Carcinoma of the lung and colon are the most common malignancies associated with glomerular lesions.

Stevens and Rainford report a case of nephrotic syndrome as the sole manifestation of large bowel malignancy. A 53-year-old woman presented with a three-month history of ankle swelling. She was otherwise healthy, with no additional relevant history. Diagnostic investigation revealed tubular adenoma and two small carcinoid tumors of the rectum and a metaplastic polyp and adenocarcinoma of the sigmoid colon. She remained well 18 months following treatment, with no evidence of recurrence of either nephrotic syndrome or large bowel neoplasia.

The mechanism responsible for cancer-related renal lesions may be the deposition of circulating immune complexes in glomeruli. Many patients with malignancies have been shown to have circulating immune complexes. Why only a small percentage of patients develop glomerular disease remains unknown. The host immune response may be an important factor.

Prognosis of patients with carcinoma and nephrotic syndrome is dependent on the type of malignancy and the severity of the nephrotic syndrome. The renal disorder may remit following removal of the tumor.

The authors recommend that any patient who presents with nephrotic syndrome due to membranous glomerulonephritis be carefully examined for underlying malignancy. (Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, July 1988, vol. 81, p. 416.)

COPYRIGHT 1989 American Academy of Family Physicians
COPYRIGHT 2004 Gale Group

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