Skip to Main Content

Key Clinical Updates in Nephritic Spectrum Glomerular Diseases

For IgA nephropathy, mycophenolate mofetil has shown promise in a Chinese population, but not in whites, suggesting a possible impact of ethnicity on disease behavior or therapy effect

Hydroxychloroquine was recently shown in a small randomized trial to decrease proteinuria over the 6-month follow-up.

In SLE, repeat renal biopsy yields more reliable information regarding disease activity than do disease activity markers (double-stranded DNA antibodies, serum C3, C4, CH50 levels), the urinary protein levels, and sediment activity; biopsy, therefore, may be used to guide maintenance therapy withdrawal.

ESSENTIALS OF DIAGNOSIS

  • Asymptomatic glomerular hematuria

    • –Hematuria with dysmorphic RBCs

    • –Proteinuria less than 1 g/day

  • Nephritic syndrome in more severe cases

    • –Glomerular hematuria (and RBC casts if glomerular bleeding is heavy)

    • –Proteinuria of 1–3 g/day

    • –Hypertension

    • –Edema

    • –Rising creatinine over days to months

  • Rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis in most severe cases

    • –AKI with rising creatinine over days to months

    • –Glomerular hematuria (and RBC casts)

    • –Proteinuria of 1–3 g/day

    • –Systemic symptoms

    • –Hypertension and edema uncommon

General Considerations

“Glomerulonephritis” is a term given to those diseases that present in the nephritic spectrum and usually signifies an inflammatory process causing renal dysfunction. It can be acute, developing over days to weeks, with or without resolution, or may be more chronic and indolent with progressive scarring. As noted above, diseases that cause a nephritic spectrum presentation may present with glomerular hematuria and proteinuria, with nephritic syndrome, or with RPGN (Figure 22–4). The presentation depends on the severity of the underlying inflammation and the pattern of injury caused by the disease process.

Clinical Findings

A. Symptoms and Signs

If the nephritic syndrome is present, the acute decrease in GFR leads to sodium retention. This is clinically manifested by edema, first seen in regions of low tissue pressure such as the periorbital and scrotal areas, and by hypertension. Heavy glomerular bleeding from inflammation may result in gross hematuria (smoky or cola-colored urine).

B. Laboratory Findings

1. Serologic testing

Serologic tests based on the history and physical examination help narrow the differential diagnosis. These tests may include C3 and C4 complement levels, antinuclear antibodies, cryoglobulins, hepatitis serologies, serum and urine protein electrophoreses, serum free light chains, ANCAs, anti-GBM antibodies, and antistreptolysin O (ASO) titers (Figure 22–5).

2. Urinalysis

The urine dipstick is positive for protein and blood. Urinary microscopy reveals red blood cells that are misshapen or dysmorphic from traversing a damaged glomerular filtration barrier. Red blood cell casts are seen with heavy glomerular bleeding and tubular stasis. When quantified, proteinuria is usually subnephrotic (less than 3 g/day).

3. Biopsy

Definitive diagnosis of the underlying glomerular disease cannot be made without a kidney biopsy. ...

Pop-up div Successfully Displayed

This div only appears when the trigger link is hovered over. Otherwise it is hidden from view.