Pathology Chapter 20 Review Kidneys
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- A 24-year-old male is diagnosed with urolithiasis after passing a small radiopaque stone. He has no underlying illnesses and has been healthy all his life. Afebrile, BP 110/70. Na 142, K 4, Cl 96, C02 25, glucose 74, creatinine 1.1, calcium 9.1, phosphor
- Calcium oxalate. About 75% of all renal stones are made up of calcium oxalate crystals. Patients with these stones tend to have hypercalciuria without hypercalcemia.
- What two types of kidney stones are radiolucent and tend to form in acidic urine
- Uric acid stones and cystine stones
- What type of kidney stones tend to occur in association with urinary tract infections, particulary those caused by urease-positive bacteria such as Proteus
- Triple phosphate stones
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47 year old man has had decreased urine output over the past 10 days. Afebrile. Urinalysis 1+ proteinuria, 4+ hematuria, urobilinogen, and no glucose or ketones. Microscope shows few W -
Rapidly progressive renal failure accompanied by hemoptysis. The figure shows glomeruli with epithelial crescents that are the morphologic correlates of rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis. Patients with this condition rapidly develop renal failure. One cause of rapidly progressive renal failure is Goodpasture syndrome, in which anti-glomerular basement membrane antibodies damage both the glomeruli and the pulmonary alveoli. Damage to the alveoli results in hemoptysis. - Is acute tubular necrosis potentially reversible
- Yes
- Is focal segmental glomerulosclerosis typically responsive to corticosteroids
- No, it is typically nonresponsive to corticosteroids
- Acute pyelonephritis is accompanied by what systemic symptoms
- Fever and leukocytosis
- Can IgA nephropathy have intermittent hematuria
- Yes
- A 3 year old previously healthy boy has become increasingly lethargic for the past 3 weeks. 36.9C, pulse 80, resp 15, BP 140/90. Periorbital edema present. Urinalysis 4+ proteinuria, no blood, ketones, or glucose. What should the parents be told
- Corticosteroid therapy should alleviate the problem. The most likely cause of nephrotic syndrome in a child is minimal change disease. For this reason, a course of corticosteroids is indicated, and 90% of patients respond. If there is no response, further workup, including a renal biopsy, can be performed. Few cases progress to chronic renal failure requiring dialysis or transplantation. The cause of minimal change disease is unknown. Children with minimal change disease do not develop rapid renal failure, and there is no genetic tendency associated with the disease
- 58 year old woman dies from a cerebral infarction. Lab findings before death included serum urea nitrogen 110, creatinine 9.8. Kidneys are small and have a coarsely granular surface appearance. Sclerotic glomeruli, fibrotic interstitium, tubular atrophy,
- Hypertension. These findings describe end-stage renal disease, the appearance of which is similar regardless of the cause (eg. vascular disease or glomerular disease). With advanced renal destruction, hypertension almost always supervenes, even if it was absent at the onset of renal disease. Many such cases are referred to as "chronic glomerulonephritis" for want of a better term.
- In a patient with kidney problems and hemoptysis, what should be suspected
- Goodpasture syndrome
- Lens dislocation is a feature of what disease
- Alport syndrome
- For the past 6 months, a 72 year old woman has noticed a slowly enlarging mass on the urethra. The mass causes local pain and irritation and is now bleeding. 2.5cm warty, ulcerated mass protruding from the external urethral meatus. There are no lesions o
- Squamous cell carcinoma. Carcinoma of the urethra is uncommon. It tends to occur in older women and is locally aggressive
- An embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma (sarcoma botryoides) is a rare tumor that occurs in what age group
- Children
- What types of tumors are typically well circumscribed and do not ulcerate
- Benign tumors, such as a leiomyoma or papilloma
- What infectious disease produces indurated, painless lesions in the genito-rectal region
- Syphilis
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72 year old man with Alzheimer disease succumbs to pneumonia. The gross appearance of the right kidney at autopsy is shown above. The left kidney is normal in size, with a smooth corti -
Ureteral obstruction. The ureteral, pelvic, and calyceal dilation results from long-standing obstruction leading to hydroureter and hydronephrosis. - With what disease do the kidneys become smaller and develop granular surfaces, but there is no dilation
- Benign nephrosclerosis
- The scarring that accompanies what two kidney diseases can be marked, and is associated with significant loss of parenchyma but not with pelvic dilation
- Analgesic nephropathy or chronic pyelonephritis
- 25 year old man has a 5 year history of celiac sprue. Several days after a mild upper respiratory infection, he begins passing dark red-brown urine. The dark urine persists for the next three days and then becomes clear and yellow, only to become red-bro
- Mesangial IgA staining by immunofluorescence. IgA nephropathy, also known as Berger disease, can explain the presence of recurrent hematuria in a young adult. Nephrotic syndrome is not present, and mesangial IgA deposition is characteristic. The initial episode of hematuria usually follows an upper respiratory infection. IgA nephropathy occurs with increased frequency in patients with celiac disease.
- Granular staining of basement membrane with IgG antibodies denotes immune complex deposition, which may occur in what disease
- Postinfectious glomerulonephritis. The subepithelial deposits are seen on electron microscopy. Patients with these changes have nephritic syndrome
- Diffuse cellular proliferation and basement membrane thickening denote what renal disease?
- Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis. In this condition, IgG and C3 are deposited in the glomeruli.
- Glomerular capillary thrombosis is typical of what disease
- Hemolytic-uremic syndrome
- 7 year old boy is recovering from impetigo. Physical exam shows a few honey-colored crusts on his face. The crusts are removed, and a culture of the lesions grows group A Streptococcus pyogenes. He is treated with a course of antibiotics. One week later,
- Complete recovery without treatment. These findings are characteristic of poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis. The strains of group A streptococci that cause poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis are different from those that give rise to rheumatic fever. Most children with poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis recover, although perhaps 1% develop a rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis. Progression to chronic renal failure may occur in 10-15% of affected adults. A urinary tract infection is not likely to accompany poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis, because the organisms that caused the immunologic reaction are no longer present when symptoms of glomerulonephritis appear
- 28 year old previously healthy man suddenly develops severe abdominal pain and begins passing red-colored urine. There are no abnormalities on physical examination. Urinalysis pH7, specific gravity 1.015, 1+ hematuria, no protein, glucose, or ketones. Th
- Idiopathic hypercalciuria. Calcium oxalate stones are the most common type of urinary tract stone. Approximately 50% of patients with calcium oxalate stones have increased excretion of calcium without hypercalcemia. The basis of hypercalciuria is not clear.
- What type of kidney stones are formed in acidic urine and are not necessarily related to gout
- Uric acid stones. At low pH, uric acid is insoluble, and stones form
- Infections can predispose to the formation of what type of kidney stones
- Magnesium ammonium phosphate stones
- Hyperparathyroidism predisposes affected persons to form kidney stones containing what
- Calcium, however, few patients with urinary tract stones have hyperparathyroidism
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56 year old man has had back pain and has passed dark-colored urine for the past month. Right costovertebral angle tenderness. Urinalysis pH 6, specific gravity 1.015, 2+ hematuria, no -
Increased hematocrit. The figure shows a renal cell carcinoma. About 5-10% of these tumors secrete erythropoietin, giving rise to polycythemia. Other substances can be secreted--among them corticotropin (adrenocorticotropic hormone), resulting in hypercortisolism in Cushing syndrome--but these cases are encountered less frequently than polycythemia. - What are some characteristics of renal cell carcinomas
- They are usually unilateral, and typically they do not destroy all of a kidney. There is no significant loss of renal function, and the serum nitrogen and creatinine levels are not elevated
- A 15-year-old boy has been passing dark-colored urine for the past month. On physical examination, he has bilateral sensorineural hearing loss and corneal erosions. Urinalysis shows pH 6.5, specific gravity 1.015, 1+ hematuria, 1+ protein, no ketones, no
- Alport syndrome. Alport syndrome is a form of hereditary nephritis. Hematuria is the most common presenting feature, but proteinuria is often present and may be in the nephrotic range. Patients progress to chronic renal failure in adulthood. Most patients have an X-linked dominant pattern of inheritance, but autosomal dominant and autosomal recessive pedigrees also exist. The foamy change in the tubular epithelial cells and ultrastructural alterations of the basement membrane are characteristic features. The genetic defect results from mutation in the gene for the alpha5 chain of type IV collagen
- Acute tubular necrosis follows what
- Ischemic or toxic injury, and there is evidence of renal failure
- What generally produces a nephrotic syndrome and deposition of immune complexes in glomerular basement membrane
- Membranous glomerulonephritis
- Nodular and diffuse glomerulosclerosis are typical changes seen in what disease
- Diabetic nephropathy
- What is Berger disease, or IgA nephropathy
- A form of glomerulonephritis that does not produce tubular changes
- 32 year old man has developed a fever and skin rash over the past 3 days. Five days later, he has increasing malaise and visits his physician. Maculopapular erythematous rash on his trunk has nearly faded away. 37.1C, BP 135/85. Creatinine 2.8, BUN 29. U
- Antibiotic use. These findings are typical of drug-induced interstitial nephritis. A variety of drugs can cause this condition, including sulfonamides, penicillins, cephalosporins, the fluoroquinolone antibiotics ciprofloxacin and norfloxacine, and the antituberculous drugs isoniazid and rifampin. Acute tubulointerstitial nephritis can also occur with use of thizide and loop diuretics, cimetidine, ranitidine, omeprazole, and nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs. The disease appears about 2 weeks after the patient begins to use the drug. Elements of type I (increased IgE) and type IV (skin test positivity to drug haptens) hypersensitivity are present
- What type of WBC will not be seen in the urine of a patient with a urinary tract infection
- Eosinophils
- When does glomerulonephritis develop in patients infected with group A Beta-hemolytic streptococci that cause skin infection
- Glomerulonephritis develops weeks after the skin infection
- What syndrome can occur after ingestion of strains of E coli that may be present in ground beef
- Hemolytic uremic syndrome
- After eating a cheeseburger, French fries, and ice cream for dinner one night, a 6 year old girl develops nausea, mild abdominal cramping, and a slight fever. Three days later, her parents notice that she is passing dark stools and dark urine and appears
- Hemolytic uremic syndrome, one of the most common causes of acute renal failure in children. It most commonly occurs after ingestion of meat infected with verocytotoxin-producing E.coli, most often O157:H7. The toxin damages endothelium, reducing nitric oxide, promoting vasoconstriction and necrosis, and promoting thrombosis. With supportive therapy, most patients recover in a few weeks, although perhaps one fourth progress to chronic renal failure
- When does postinfectious glomerulonephritis usually occur
- Several weeks after an infection, usually with group A Beta-hemolytic streptococci
- In what age group does the vasculitis Wegener granulomatosis occur
- Most often in adults
- Hereditary nephritis usually occurs in what age group
- Childhood; it is progressive and is not related to vascular disease
- Is an IgA nephropathy accompanied by vascular changes
- No. It most often occurs in young adults
- The parents of a 6 year old girl notice that she has become increasingly lethargic over the past 2 weeks. Puffiness around the eyes. 36.9C, BP 100/60. Serum creatinine 0.7, urea nitro 12. Urinalysis pH 6.5, specific gravity 1.011, 4+ proteinuria, no bloo
- Effacement of podocyte foot processes. A child with nephrotic syndrome and no other clinical findings is most likely to have lipoid nephrosis, also called minimal change disease. The term "minimal change disease' reflects the paucity of pathologic findings. There is fusion of foot processes, which can be seen only by electron microscopy
- In kidney EM, what do subepithelial electron-dense humps represent
- Immune complexes, which are seen with postinfectious glomerulonephritis
- In kidney EM, variability of basement membrane thickening may be seen in what disease
- Alport syndrome
- The mesangial matrix is expanded in some forms of what kidney disease
- Glomerulonephritis (eg IgA nephropathy) and other diseases, such as diabetes mellitus. It will not be expanded in minimal change disease
- 25 year old woman experiences sudden onset of fever, malaise, and nausea. 38.2C, pulse 85, resp 18, BP 140/90. Urinalysis 1+ proteinuria, 4+ hematuria, no ketones or glucose. RBC casts are seen on microscopic exam of the urine. Renal biopsy shows marked
- Postinfectious glomerulonephritis, one of many causes of a nephritic syndrome characterized by hematuria and RBC casts. Most children recover completely, but one in six adults may progress to chronic renal failure. Some cases may occur after a streptococcal pharyngitis (poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis). In other cases such as this one, the preceding infection is so mild that patients give no history.
- Nodular and diffuse glomerulosclerosis are characteristic of what diease
- Diabetic nephropathy
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77 year old man has had increasing difficulties with urination for the past 2 years. He has difficulty starting and stopping the urine stream. 37C, BP 130/85. The gross appearance of h -
Prostate-specific antigen level of 5ng/mL. This patient has bladder hypertrophy resulting from outlet obstruction. In an older man, this type of obstruction is most often caused by prostatic enlargement resulting from hyperplasia or carcinoma. Mild elevations in the prostate-specific antigen level may occur in patients with prostatic hyperplasia, and greater increases in PSA suggest carcinoma - Why would a positive ANA test not be expected in a patient with bladder neck obstruction
- Autoimmune conditions may be associated with interstitial cystitis, but cystitis does not cause bladder neck obstruction
- Schistosomiases leads to what bladder morphology
- Chronic inflammation and scarring
- 50 year old woman sees her physician because she has had flank pain for the past 2 days. Bilateral costovertebral angle tenderness. Urinalysis pH 7, specific gravity 1.010, 2+ hematuria, no protein, glucose, or ketones. US shows bilaterally enlarged kidn
- Hypertension. This woman has an autosomal dominant form of polycystic kidney disease. Hypertension and infection are the most frequent complications of this disorder.
- What disease is at increased risk in persons with dialysis-acquired cysts but not in those with polycystic kidney disease
- Renal cell carcinoma
- Is nephrotic syndrome common in polycystic kidney disease
- Although some proteinuria is present in many forms of chronic renal disease, nephrotic syndrome is not common in polycystic kidney disease
- A microangiopathic hemolytic anemia may be seen in what disease that typically affects the kidney
- Hemolytic-uremic syndrome
- Are vascular changes with resultant infarction seen in polycystic kidney disease
- No
- Is Cushing syndrome a complication of polycystic kidney disease
- Cushing syndrome may complicate renal cell carcinoma, but it is not a complication of polycystic kidney disease
- 26 year old man is involved in a motor vehicle accident and sustains acute blood loss. Hypotensive for several hours before help arrives. Receives a transfusion of 3 units of packed RBCs. Over the next week, serum nitro increases to 48, serum creatinine
- Rupture of the tubular basement membrane. This patient's history is typical of ischemic acute tubular necrosis, which is often accompanied by rupture of the basement membrane (tubulorrhexis). An initiating phase that lasts approximately 1 day is followed by a maintenance phase during which progressive oliguria and rising blood urea nitrogen levels occur, with salt and water overload. This is followed by a recovery phase during which there is a steady increase in urinary output and hypokalemia. Eventually, tubular function is restored. Treatment of this acute renal failure results in recovery of nearly all patients
- Glomerular crescents in Bowman's space suggest what
- A rapidly progressing glomerulonephritis that is unlikely to resolve
- Interstitial lymphocytic infiltrates in the kidneys suggests what
- A chronic tubulointerstitial process
- Fibrinoid necrosis in arterioles of the kidney is a feature of what
- Malignant nephrosclerosis, a serious condition that produces significant renal damage.
- Nodular glomerulosclerosis is a feature of what disease
- Diabetic nephropathy. It is a progressive condition that leads to chronic renal failure
- 60 year old previously health man feels feverish and weak. Reports passing dark-colored urine on several occasions during the past month but has no urinary frequency, dysuria, or nocturia. 37.8C, BP 125/85. Urinalysis 4+ hematuria, 1+ proteinuria, no glu
- Abdominal CT scan for renal mass. Painless hematuria in an older adult suggest a renal neoplasm. The additional presence of constitutional symptoms, such as fever and weakness, should raise the suspicion of a renal cell carcinoma.
- What symptoms accompany urinary tract calculi when passed
- Severe, colicky pain
- What urinalysis value is typically manifest with nephrotic syndrome
- Proteinuria
- Why is a renal biopsy not recommened in a patient with suspect renal cell carcinoma
- A renal biopsy has a low yield in a patient without an acute-onset renal disease, and it is an ineffective way of diagnosing tumors
- 40 year old man has experienced increasing lower extremity edema for the past 3 weeks. Afebrile and BP 135/90 with pitting edema to the knees. Serum creatinine 1.2, urea nitro 16, 24 hour urine protein level is 7. Urinalysis 4+ protein but no blood or gl
- Subepithelial electron-dense deposits. This patient with nephrotic syndrome has clinical and histologic features of membranous glomerulonephritis. In most cases, this is an idiopathic disease caused by immune complex deposition on the glomerular basement membranes. Granular immunofluorescence with IgG and C3 supports this diagnosis. Under the electron microscope, electron-dense immune complexes are seen on the epithelial side of the basement membrane
- An EM of the kidney showing subendothelial electron-dense deposits with duplication of the basement membrane is a feature of what
- Type I membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis
- An EM of the kidney showing electron-dense deposits limited to the mesangium are seen in what disease
- IgA nephropathy
- An EM of the kidney showing podocyte foot process fusion without any other abnormalities occurs in what disease
- Lipoid nephrosis (minimal change disease)
- 50 year old woman has had fever and flank pain for the past 2 days. 38.2C, pulse 81, resp 16, BP 130/80. Urinalysis no protein, glucose, or ketones. Leukocyte esterase test is positive. Micro exam of urine shows numerous polymorphonuclear leukocytes and
- Escherichia coli. The clinical features in this patient are typical of urinary tract infection, and Eschericia coli is the most common cause. The WBCs are characteristic of an acute inflammatory process. The presence of WBC casts indicates that the infection must have occured in the kidney, because casts are formed in renal tubules. Most infections of the urinary tract begin in the lower urinary tract and ascend to the kidneys. Hematogenous spread is less common
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58 year old man who is relatively healthy sees his physician for a routine health maintenance exam. Mild hypertension. Serum creatinine 2.2, urea nitro 25. Microalbuminuria is present, -
Hemoglobin A1c. The figure shows nodular and diffuse glomerulosclerosis, a classis lesion in diabetes mellitus. Patients with diabetes mellitus have an elevated level of glycosylated hemoblobin A1C. Patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus may initially have microalbuminuria, which predicts development of future overt diabetic nephropathy. There is progressive loss of renal function. These patients are often hypertensive and have hyaline arteriolosclerosis. The presence of overt proteinuria suggest progression to end-stage renal disease within 5 years - The ANCA test is postitive in what forms of kidney disease
- Some forms of vasculitis, such as Wegener granulomatosis, which can involve the kidneys
- The anti-streptolysin O (ASO) titer is elevated following what
- Streptococcal infections, which may cause glomerulonephritis
- The C3 nephritic factor may be present in what kidney disease
- Type II membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (dense deposit disease).
- Some patients with membranous glomerulonephritis have a positive serologic test result for what viral antigen
- HBsAg
- A 20 year old woman, G1P0, who is in the third trimester, has felt minimal fetal movement. An ultrasound shows markedly decreased amniotic fluid index characteristic of oligohydramnios. She gives birth to a stillborn male fetus at 33 weeks gestation. At
- Symmetrically enlarged kidneys composed of small, radially arranged cysts. This fetus has features of autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease (RPKD) involving the liver. RPKD is a disease that occurs in children; by contrast, autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (DPKD) leads to presentation with renal failure in adults. Some less common forms of RPKD are accompanied by survival beyond infancy, and these patients develop congenital hepatic fibrosis.
- Enlarged kidneys with 1-4cm cysts are characteristic of what disease
- Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease in adults.
- What is the most common renal cystic disease seen in fetuses and infants, in which the cysts and kidneys are variably sized
- Multicystic renal dysplasia (multicystic dysplastic kidney). This disease can be focal, unilateral, or bilateral; however, congenital hepatic fibrosis is not present
- Small, shrunken, granular kidneys typify what disease
- End-stage renal disease in adults
- In the kidneys, irregular cortical scars with pelviceal dilation may represent what
- Hydronephrosis complicated by infection in chronic pyelonephritis, a process that occurs in adults
- In a fetus, kidney dilation with calyceal thinning can occur how
- With obstructions in utero, such as posterior urethral valves in males or urethral atresia in either males or females; liver lesions will not be present
- 65 year old woman has experienced increasing malaise with nocturia and polyuria for the past year. BP 170/95. Urinalysis pH 7.5, specific gravity 1.010, 1+ proteinuria, no glucose, blood, or ketones. The tests for leukocyte esterase and nitrite yield pos
- Reflux nephropathy. This description of the gross appearance of the kidney is characteristic of chronic pyelonephritis, caused most often by reflux nephropathy. Typical features include coarse and irregular scarring resulting from ascending infection, blunting and deformity of calyces, and asymmetric involvement of the kidneys. The loss of tubules from scarring gives rise to reduced renal concentrating ability; hence, the patient had polyuria with a low specific gravity in the urine
- Essential hypertension is a risk factor for what kidney disease
- Benign nephrosclerosis
- How will the kidneys appear in chronic glomerulonephritis, benign nephrosclerosis (caused by essential hypertension), or systemic lupus erythematosus.
- Bilateral symmetric kidney involvement, and the affected kidneys will be shrunked and finely granular
- What disease is characterized by large cysts that replace the renal parenchyma and greatly increase the size of the kidneys bilaterally
- Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease
- 29 year old woman has had fever and sore throat for the past 3 days. Temp 38C. Pharynx is erythematous, with yellowish tonsillar exudate. Group A Streptococcus pyogenes is cultured. She is treated with ampicillin and recovers fully in 7 days. Two weeks l
- Hypersensitivity reaction to ampicillin. These findings point to an acute drug-induced interstitial nephritis caused by ampicillin. This is an immunologic reaction, probably caused by a drug acting as a hapten.
- Deposition in the kidney of immune complexes with streptococcal antigens will lead to what disease
- Poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis. It is unlikely to be accompanied by a rash or by eosinophils in the urine
- Where does the infection originate in acute pyelonephritis
- It is an ascending infection; only uncommonly is it caused by hematogenous spread of bacteria from other sites.
- Acute tubular necrosis, which can lead to acute renal failure, is caused by what
- Hypoxia resulting from shock or from toxic injury caused by chemicals such as mercury, and only rarely if ever by bacterial toxins
- 4 year old girl has complained of abdominal pain for the past month. Febrile, and palpation of the ab shows tender mass on the right. Bowel sounds present. Lab studies show hematuria without proteinuria. Ab CT shows 12cm circumscribed, solid mass in the
- Wilms Tumor. Wilms tumor is the most common renal neoplasm in children, and one of the most common childhood neoplasms. A complex staging, grading, and molecular analysis formula, as well as surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation, result in a high cure rate. The microscopic pattern of Wilms tumor (nephroblastoma) resembles the fetal kidney nephrogenic zone.
- What type of renal tumors may be sporadic or part of the genetic syndrome of tuberous sclerosis. They may be multiple and bilateral and have well-differentiated muscle, adipose tissue, and vascular components
- Angiomyolipomas
- What type of renal tumors are generally less than 1cm and are incidental findings
- Renomedullary interstitial cell tumors (medullary fibromas)
- What type of renal tumor is rare in children, and the most common patterns are clear cell, papillary, and chromophobe
- Renal cell carcinoma
- What type of tumors arise in the urothelium in adults and microscopically resemble urothelium
- Transitional cell carcinomas
- One week after a mild flulike illness, a 9 year old boy has an episode of hematuria that subsides within 2 days. One month later, he tells his parents that his urine is red again. On physical exam there are no findings. Urinalysis pH7, specific gravity 1
- Deposition of immune complexes containing IgA. Development of recurrent hematuria following a viral illness in a child or young adult is typically associated with IgA nephropathy. In these patients, some defect in immune regulation causes excessive mucosal IgA synthesis in response to viral or other environmental antigens. IgA complexes are deposited in the mesangium and initiate glomerular injury.
- Antibodies against type IV collagen are formed in what disease
- Goodpasture syndrome.
- Cytokine-mediated injury to the glomerular capillaries can occur when
- In transplant rejection
- Defects in the structure of glomerular basement membrane are a feature of what disease
- Hereditary nephritis
- A 35 year old man is awakened at night because of severe lower abdominal pain that radiates to the groin. The pain is very intense and comes in waves. The next morning, he notices blood in his urine. On exam, there are no remarkable findings. Diagnosis?
- Ureteral lithiasis. This patient has ureteral colic from the passage of a stone down the ureter.
- What type of pain usually accompanies renal cell carcinoma
- Dull pain
- 7 year old boy is brought to the physician by his mother, who is concerned because he has become less active over the past 10 days. Facial puffiness present. Urinalysis no blood, glucose, or ketones, and micro exam shows no casts or crystals. Serum creat
- Cytokine-mediated visceral epithelial cell injury. Steroid-responsive proteinuria in a child is typical of minimal change disease in which the kidney looks normal by light micro but there is foot process fusion by EM. The most likely cause of foot process fusion is a primary injury to visceral epithelial cells caused by T-cell derived cytokines
- Immune complex deposition in membranous glomerulopathy can give rise to what disease
- Nephrotic syndrome. It is less common in children than adults and is not steroid-responsive
- Certain verotoxin-producing E. coli strains can cause hemolytic-uremic syndrome by injury to what tissue
- Capillary endothelium
- What kidney disease is mediated by T cell injury with tubulitis
- Acute cellular renal transplant rejection
- IgA nephropathy with mesangial IgA deposition and consequent glomerular injury gives rise to what finding on urinalysis
- Recurrent gross or microscopic hematuria and far less commonly to nephrotic syndrome
- 49 year old man saw his physician because he had increased swelling in the extremities for 2 months. Generalized edema. 24hr urine collected 4.1g of protein as well as albumin and globulins. Extensive testing did not indicate the presence of a systemic d
- Deposition of immune complexes on the basement membrane. This patient has idiopathic membranous glomerulopathy, producing nephrotic syndrome. Diffuse basement membrane thickening, in the absence of proliferation changes, and granular deposits of IgG and C3 are typical of this condition. It is caused by deposition of immune complexes on the basement membrane, which activates complement.
- Antibodies that react with basement membrane, as in Goodpasture syndrome, give rise to what type of immunofluorescence pattern
- A linear pattern
- What are the causes of membranous glomerulopathy
- In 85% of patients with membranous glomerulopathy, the cause of immune complex deposition is unknown. In the remaining 15%, an associated disease (eg systemic lupus erythematosus) or some known cause of immune complex formation (eg drug reaction) exists. Membranous glomerulopathy has no association with streptococcal infections, and there is no evidence of cytokine or T-cell mediated damage in this disease
- 31 year old woman experiences a bout of abdominal pain and sees her physician 1 week after noticing blood in her urine. She has had three episodes of urinary tract infection during the past year. There are no remarkable findings on physical examination.
- Medullary sponge kidney. The congenital disorder known as MSK is present to some degree in up to 1% of adults. In MSK, cystic dilation of 1-5mm is present in the inner medullary and papillary ducts. MSK is bilateral in 70% of cases. Not all papillae are equally affected, although calculi are often present in dilated collecting ducts. Patients usually develop kidney stone, infection, or recurrent hematuria in the third or fourth decade. More than 50% of patients have stones.
- What type of crystals are present in gout
- Uric acid crystals
- What disease may occur sporadically or as part of various genetic syndromes, such as Meckel-Gruber syndrome, in fetuses and newborns
- Multicystic renal dysplasia
- What disease can lead to hydroureter, hydronephrosis, and an increased risk of infection
- Vesicoureteral reflux
- 42 year old man has had right flank pain for the past 2 days. 37.4C, pulse 70, resp 14, BP 130/85. Serum creat 1.1. Urinalysis no blood, protein, glucose. No WBCs or RBCs in urine. CT shows 7cm eccentric lesion of the upper pole of the right kidney. The
- Simple renal cyst. Simple cysts are common in adults, and multiple cysts also may occur. The cysts are not as numerous as those occuring in autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease, and there is no evidence of renal failure. Simple cysts may be as large as 10cm, and hemorrhage sometimes occurs into a cyst. Multiple cysts sometimes develop in patients receiving long-term hemodialysis.
- Acute pyelonephritis is usually accompanied by what signs and symptoms
- Fever, and WBCs in the urine
- 51 year old woman has had recurrent urinary tract infections for the past 15 years. Proteus mirabilis was cultured from her urine. For the past 4 days, she has had burning pain on urination and urinary frequency. On physical exam, 37.9C, pulse 70, resp 1
- Staghorn calculus. Recurrent urinary tract infections with urea-splitting organisms such as Proteus can lead to formation of magnesium ammonium phosphate stones. These stones are large, and they fill the dilated calyceal system. Because of their large size and projections into the calyces, such stones are sometimes called "staghorn calculi."
- Cases of acute tubular necrosis typically occur from what types of injuries
- Toxic or ischemic renal injuries
- Malignant nephrosclerosis primarily affects what tissue
- It is primarily a vascular process that is not associated with infection
- 53 year old woman has had dysuria and frequency of urination for the past week. 38C, pain on palpation over the left costovertebral angle. Glucose 177, HgbA1C 9.8%, Hgb 13.1, platelets 232,200, WBC 11,320. Urinalysis pH 6.5, specific gravity 1.016, 2+ gl
- Necrotizing papillitis. This patient has laboratory findings consistent with diabetes mellitus and clinical features of acute pyelonephritis caused by Escherichia coli infection. Necrotizing papillitis with papillary necrosis is a complication of acute pyelonephritis, and diabetic patients are particularly prone to this development. In the absence of diabetes mellitus, papillary necrosis develops when acute pyelonephritis occurs in combination with urinary tract obstruction. Papillary necrosis also can occur with chronic use of analgesics
- What complication does Crescentic glomerulonephritis cause
- Rapidly progressive renal failure
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42 year old man has experience increasing malaise for the past month. He is bothered by increasing swelling in both hands and legs. Generalized edema present. Afebrile, BP 140/90. Urin -
Chronic Hepatitis B. One of the most common causes of nephrotic syndrome in adults is membranous glomerulopathy, caused by immune complex deposition, shown on the left as granular deposits with C3. About 85% of cases are idiopathic, but some cases follow infections (eg hepatitis or malaria) or are associated with causes such as malignancies or autoimmune diseases - Recurrent urinary tract infection can cause what kidney disease
- Chronic pyelonephritis
- 58 year old man is in stable condition after an acute myocardial infarction. Two days later, his urine output decreases, and the serum nitro increases to 3.3. Oliguria persists for 5 days, followed by polyuria for 2 days. He is then discharged from the h
- Acute tubular necrosis. The most common cause of acute tubular necrosis is ichemic injury. The hyptotension that develops after myocardial infarction causes decreased renal blood flow.
- What renal disease takes years to develop and is associated with benign essential hypertension
- Benign nephrosclerosis
- Several members of a family developed chronic renal failure by the age of 50 years. Most are males. The affected persons also developed visual problems. Some younger family members have proteinuria and hematuria on urinalysis. A renal biopsy specimen fro
- Nerve deafness. These findings are characteristic of Alport syndrome, a form of hereditary nephritis. Most cases are inherited in an X-linked dominant pattern, but autosomal dominant and autosomal recessive patterns of inheritance also are seen. Most commonly, males are severly affected. Vision, hearing, and renal function are affected, but other organ systems are not affected
- 65 year old man recently retired after many years in a job that involved exposure to aniline dyes, including Beta-naphthylamine. One month ago, he had an episode of hematuria that was not accompanied by abdominal pain. On physical exam, there are no abno
- Urothelial carcinoma. Exposure to arylamines markely increases the risk of bladder cancer, which can occur decades after the initial exposure. After absorption, aromatic amines are hydroxylated into an active form, which is detoxified by conjugation with glucuronic acid and then excreted. Urinary glucuronidase then splits the nontoxic conjugated form into the active carcinogenic form. Renal cell carcinomas also may present as painless hematuria, but exposure to aniline dyes is not a risk factor.
- When is hemorrhagic cystitis likely to occur
- After radiation injury or treatment with cytotoxic drugs such as cyclophosphamide
- Tubercular cystitis is typically a complication of what disease
- Renal tuberculosis
- 55 year old woman has had poorly controlled hyperglycemia for many years. Now has burning pain on urination for 3 days. 2cm ulceration on the skin of the heel and reduced sensation in the lower extremities. Visual 20/100 bilaterally. Urinalysis 1+ protei
- Nodular hyaline mesangial masses. This patient has diabetes mellitus. Nodular and diffuse glomerulosclerosis often occur in patients with long-standing diabetes mellitus. Infections with bacterial organisms also occur more frequently in patients with diabetes mellitus
- Deposition of what proteins onto the glomerular basement membrane occurs with forms of glomerulonephritis caused by immune complex deposition, including lupus nephritis and membranous glomerulonephritis
- IgG and C3
- What is the only abnormality observed in minimal change disease
- Effacement of podocyte foot processes, but this change is not specific for MCD and may be seen in other disorders that produce proteinuria
- In what disease is there IgA deposition in the mesangium
- Berger disease (IgA nephropathy)
- A necrotizing granulomatous vasculitis can be present in the kidneys of patients with what disease
- Wegener granulomatosis
- Thickening and thinning of glomerular basement membranes occurs in what disease
- Alport syndrome
- A 17 year old girl has had arthralgias and myalgias for several months. During the past week, she has noticed a decreased output of urine, which is reddish brown. BP 160/100, and she has an erythematous malar skin rash. ANA and anti-double-stranded DNA t
- RBC casts. This patient has findings of systemic lupus erythematosus, an autoimmune disease that often manifests with renal involvement. There are several forms of lupus nephritis, and they tend to produce a nephritic pattern of involvement. Because these patients have leakage of RBCs from damaged glomeruli, as well as proteinuria, RBC casts are found in the urine.
- When will eosinophils be found in the urine
- As a result of drug-induced interstitial nephritis
- Myoglobinuria results most often from what
- Rhabdomyolysis, which can occur after severe crush injuries
- What are oval fat bodies in the urine
- Sloughed tubular cells containing abundant lipid that are characteristic of nephrotic syndromes
- Triple phosphate crystals in the urine are found in what circumstance
- Patients with infections caused by urease-positive bacteria, such as Proteus.
- Where do waxy casts found in the urine form
- Dilated, damaged tubules
- A 28 year old woman has had dysuria, frequency, and urgency for the past 2 days. 37.6C. Urine culture grows >100,000 colonies of E. coli. She is treated with antibiotics. If the problem continues to recur, that patient is likely to be at greatest risk
- Chronic pyelonephritis. Most cases of pyelonephritis result from ascending bacterial infections, which are more common in women. Recurrent urinary tract infections complicated by vesicoureteral reflux cause progressive interstitial damage and scarring, which can lead to chronic pyelonephritis with renal failure. Glomerular injury is not the major consequence of renal infections
- Diffuse glomerulosclerosis is a feature of what disease
- Diabetes mellitus
- A sexually active 26 year old man has had pain on urination for the past 4 days. No lesions on the penis. Afebrile. Urinalysis shows no blood, ketones, protein, or glucose. Urine exam shows few WBCs and no casts or crystals. What infectious agent is most
- Chlamydia trachomatis. This patient has urethritis. The most common cause of nongonococcal urethritis in males is Chlamydia trachomatis. The condition is a nuisance; however, the behavior that led to the infection can place the patient at risk of other sexually transmitted diseases
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61 year old woman sees the physician because she has experienced increasing malaise for the past 5 years. No physical abnormalities except BP 150/95. One week later she dies suddenly a -
Ruptured berry aneurysm. These findings are characteristic of autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease. As seen in the pictures, several large cysts have completely replaced the kidney. In autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease, which typically presents in fetal and neonatal life, the kidneys have a smooth external appearance. On cut section, many small cysts give the kidney a spongelike appearance. About 10-30% of affected patients with DPKD have an intracranial berry aneurysm, and some of these can rupture without warning - For the past 20 years, a 69 year old man with chronic arthritis has taken more than 3g of analgesics per day, including phenacetin, aspirin, and acetaminophen. He sees his physician because of increasing malaise, nausea, and diminished mentation. BP 156/
- Renal papillary necrosis. This patient has analgesic nephropathy, which damages the renal interstitium and can give rise to papillary necrosis. The toxic injury that occurs with analgesic use is slowly progressive and not acute, in contrast to the course of acute tubular necrosis
- 58 year old woman sees her physician for a routine health maintenance exam. The only abnormality on exam is BP 168/109. Urinalysis pH7, specific gravity 1.020, 1+ proteinuria, no blood, glucose, or ketones. Ab ultrasound scan shows bilaterally and symmet
- Chronic glomerulonephritis. Chronic glomerulonephritis may follow specific forms of acute glomerulonephritis. In many cases, however, it develops insidiously with no known cause. With progressive glomerular injury and sclerosis, both kidneys become smaller, and their surfaces become granular. Hypertension often develops because of renal ischemia. Regardless of the initiating cause, the end-stage kidneys appear morphologically identical. They have sclerotic glomeruli, thickened arteries, and chronic inflammation of the interstitium
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Previously healthy 21 year old man sees his physician because he notices blood in his urine. No dysuria, frequency, or hesitancy of urination. No abnormal physical findings. Serum urea -
Anti-glomerular basement membrane antibody. The linear pattern of staining shown in the right figure indicates the presence of anti-glomerular basement membrane antibodies. Such antibodies are typically seen in Goodpasture syndrome. - Poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis typically has what pattern of immune complex deposition
- Granular
- HIV infection can lead to a nephropathy that resembles focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, in which IgM and C3 are deposited where
- The mesangial areas of affected glomeruli
- The C3 nephritic factor can be a marker for what
- Type II membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis
- 33 year old woman has had fever and increasing fatigue for the past 2 months. Over the past year, she has noticed soreness of her muscles and joints and has had a 4kg weight loss. 37.5C, pulse 80, resp 15, BP 145/95. Pain on deep inspiration, friction ru
- Anti-double stranded DNA antibody. This patient has findings characteristic of systemic lupus erythematosus with lupus nephritis. Systemic problems include fever, arthralgias, myalgias, pancytopenia, and serositis with pericarditis and pleuritis. Renal disease is common in SLE, and a renal biopsy helps to determine the severity of involvement and the appropriate therapy.
- Antihistone antibody may be present in what disease
- Drug-induced lupus
- ANCAs can be seen when
- Some forms of vasculitis, such as Wegener granulomatosis or microscopic polyangiitis
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66 year old woman died of an acute myocardial infarction. At autopsy, both kidneys were decreased in size (about 120g each) with a finely granular cortical surface. High mag of kidney -
Benign hypertension. This figure shows hyaline arteriolosclerosis, which typically occurs in patients with benign hypertension. Similar changes also can be seen with aging in the absence of hypertension. - Malignant hypertension causes distinctive renal vascular lesions that include...
- Fibrinoid necrosis and hyperplastic arteriosclerosis
- Flank pain is a symptom of what diseases
- Acute pyelonephritis and some renal neoplasms
- 79 year old man has had increasing back pain and fatigue for the past 6 months. No remarkable physical findings. Hgb 9.6, platelet 241,600, WBC 7160, serum protein 9.8, albumin 3.6, glucose 72, creatinine 3.3, urea nitro 30. Urinalysis pH 7, specific gra
- Multiple myeloma. This patient has a high serum globulin level from the presence of a monoclonal protein, and the back pain is probably caused by lytic lesions in the spine. Patients with myeloma often have Bence-Jones proteinuria (not detected by the standard dipstick urinalysis), and some have cast nephropathy, which can cause acute or, more commonly, chronic renal failure.
- Cystinuria leads to stones with what appearance
- The distinctive crystals look like stop signs
- 30 year old woman with a history of recurrent urinary tract infections has had a high fever for the past 3 days. 38.4C. Marked tenderness on deep palpation. A renal sonogram shows an enlarged right kidney with pelvic and calyceal enlargement and cortical
- Vesicoureteral reflux. These changes are characteristic of chronic pyelonephritis. Urinary tract obstruction favors recurrent urinary tract infection. Vesicoureteral reflux propels infected urine from the urinary bladder to the ureters and renal pelvis and predisposes to infection.
- 32 year old man with a history of intravenous drug use comes to the ER because he has had a high fever for the past 2 days. 38.4C. Palpable spleen tip, bilateral costovertebral tenderness, diastolic cardiac murmur. Serum urea nitro 15. Urinalysis 2+ hema
- Wedge-shaped regions of yellow-white cortical necrosis involving both kidneys. This patient is septic, and the heart murmur strongly suggests infective endocarditis. Cardiac lesions are the source of emboli (from valvular vegetations or mural thrombi) that can lodge in renal artery branches, producing areas of coagulative necrosis. These areas of acute infarction typically are wedge-shaped on cut section because of the vascular flow pattern.
- Small, shrunked kidneys represent what?
- An end stage of many chronic renal diseases
- Irregular cortical scars in asymmetrically shrunken kidneys with calyceal dilation may represent what
- Hydronephrosis complicated by infection with chronic pyelonephritis.
- In the kidney, what does marked bilateral renal pelvic and calyceal dilation with thinning of the cortices point to?
- Obstructive uropathy, such as occurs with nodular prostatic hyperplasia
- What do scattered petechial hemorrhages in slightly swollen kidneys represent
- Hyperplastic arteriolosclerosis associated with malignant hypertension
- Three years ago, a 47 year old woman had a mastectomy of the right breast to remove an infiltrating ductal carcinoma. She now has bone pain, and a radionuclide scan shows multiple areas of increased uptake in the vertebrae, ribs, pelvis, and right femur.
- Hypercalcemia. This patient has findings characteristic of nephrocalcinosis resulting from hypercalcemia. One of the most common causes of hypercalcemia in adults is metastatic disease. The hypercalcemia produces a chronic tubulointerstitial disease of the kidneys that is initially manifested by loss of concentrating ability. With continued hypercalcemia, there is progressive loss of renal function. Urinary tract stones formed of calcium oxalate may also be present
- Hypercholesterolemia may be seen in some cases of what kidney disease
- Minimal change disease, which can occur in Hodgkin disease and other lymphoproliferative malignancies
- Some patients with what kidney disease may have a positive serologic test result for Hepatitis B surface antigen
- Membranous glomerulonephritis
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45 year old man has experienced increasing malaise, nausea, and reduced urine output for the past 3 days. Afebrile and normotensive. Serum creatinine 2.5. Urinalysis shows hematuria bu -
Antiglomerular basement membrane antibody test. The renal biopsy specimen shows glomerular crescents, indicative of rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis. Crescentic glomerulonephritis is divided into three groups on the basis of immunofluorescence: type I (antiglomerular basement membrane [GBM] disease); type II (immune-complex disease); and type III (characterized by absence of anti-GBM antibodies or immune complexes). Each type has a different cause and treatment. The presence of anti-GBM antibodies suggests Goodpasture syndrome; patients with this disorder require plasmapheresis. Type II crescentic glomerulonephritis can occur in systemic lupus erythematosus, in Henoch-Schonlein purpura, and after infections. Causes of type III crescentic glomerulonephritis include Wegener granulomatosis and microscopic polyangitis. Immunofluorescence studies are critical for the classification and treatment of crescentic glomerulonephritis - 28 year old man is diagnosed with acute myelogenous leukemia (M2). After induction with a multiagent chemotherapy protocol, he has an episode of lower abdominal pain accompanied by passage of red-colored urine. He has no fever, dysuria, or urinary freque
- Uric acid crystals. The rapid cell turnover in acute leukemias, and cell death from treatment, causes the release of purines from the cellular DNA breakdown. The resulting hyperuricemia can predispose to the formation of uric acid stones. Renal stones can produce colicky pain when they pass down the ureter and through the urethra, and the local trauma to the urothelium can produce hematuria. Uric acid stones form in acidic urine. Unlike stones containing calcium, uric acid stones are radiolucent and are not visible on a plain radiograph
- When may eosinophils appear in the urine
- Drug induced interstitial nephritis
- Oval fat bodies, which are sloughed tubular cells containing abundant lipid, are characteristic of what kidney disease
- Nephrotic syndromes
- Where in the kidney do waxy casts in the urine form
- They form in dilated, damaged tubules
- 44 year old man has developed fever, nonproductive cough, and decreased urine output over the past 3 days. 37.7C and BP 145/95. He has sinusitis. Crackles are heard over all lung fields. CXR bilateral patchy infiltrates and nodules. Serum creatinine 4.1,
- Wegener granulomatosis. Wegener causes rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis characterized by epithelial crescents in Bowman's space. Several features differentiate Wegener granulomatosis from other forms of crescentic glomerulonephritis (eg Goodpastures syndrome). These are the presence of granulomatous vasculitis, the absence of immune complexes or anti-glomerular basement membrane-(GBM) antibodies, and the presence of C-ANCA.
- 65 year old woman has recently experienced several transient ischemic attacks. BP 150/95. Urinalysis 1+ proteinuria and no glucose, blood, or ketones. Micro exam of urine shows no RBCs or WBCs and few oxalate crystals. Ultrasound shows kidneys are slight
- Hyaline arteriolosclerosis. Hyaline arteriolosclerosis, characterized by thickening and hyalinization of small arteries and arterioles, is typically seen in patients with long-standing benign hypertension. Such a change also occurs with aging. Vascular narrowing causes ischemic changes that are slow and progressive. There is diffuse scarring and shrinkage of the kidneys.
- When will fibrinoid necrosis in arterioles of the kidney be seen
- Malignant hypertension
- Over the past 72 hours, a 44 year old man has experienced worsening headache, nausea, and vomiting. BP 276/158, and there is bilateral papilledema. Urinalysis 2+ proteinuria, 1+ hematuria, and no glucose or ketones. What renal lesion is most likely to be
- Necrotizing arteriolitis. This patient has malignant hypertension. Necrotizing arteriolitis and hyperplastic arteriolosclerosis are the distinctive vascular lesions of malignant hypertension.
- Papillary necrosis is more likely to complicate what forms of nephropathy
- Diabetic nephropathy or analgesic nephropathy.
- 35 year old previously healthy man is found dead in his home. At autopsy, the medical examiner notices bilaterally enlarged kidneys that contain multiple, irregularly arranged cysts of different shapes and sizes. There is a 0.5 cm nonruptured intracerebr
- The patient has autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease, but died of a cocaine overdose. The combination of cysts in the kidney and berry aneruysms in the brain is characteristic of DPKD. The cysts also may appear in the liver and pancreas. Because of the autosomal dominant pattern of inheritance, with high penetrance of the gene, first-degree relatives are at risk of having the same disorder and should be evaluated by ultrasound or other imaging techniques. This is particulary important, because many patients remain asymptomatic until the onset of renal failure in adults.
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12 year old girl has experienced increasing malaise for the past 2 weeks. There is periorbital edema on physical examination. The child is afebrile. Proteinuria on dipstick urinalysis -
Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis. The biopsy specimen shows sclerosis of only a segment of the glomerulus (segmental lesion), and because only 50% of the glomeruli are affected, this is focal disease. Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis manifests clinically with nephrotic syndrome that does not respond to corticosteroid therapy. In contrast, corticosteroid-responsive nephrotic syndrome in children is typically caused by minimal change disease (lipoid nephrosis), which is not associated with any glomerular change seen under the light microscope. - Nephrotic syndrome with nodular glomerulosclerosis or diffuse thickening of the basement membrane is likely caused by what disease
- Diabetes
- 19 year old woman has had fever and chills accompanied by right flank pain for the past 3 days. 38.3C, BP 150/90, right costovertebral angle tenderness. Serum glucose 77, creatinine 1.0. Urinalysis pH 6.5, specific gravity 1.018, no protein, blood, gluco
- Vesicoureteral reflux. This patient has acute pyelonephritis. Vesicoureteral reflux, acquired or congenital, is extremely important in the pathogenesis of ascending urinary tract infections, because it allows bacteria to ascend from the urinary bladder into the ureter and the pelvis. In general, urinary tract infections are more common in females because of their shorter urethra, but in the abscence of vesicoureteral reflux, the infections tend to remain localized in the urinary bladder. Older women and sexually active women are at increased risk of urinary tract infections.
- Several days after eating a hamburger, chili, and ice cream at a home barbeque, a 5 year old girl develops cramping abdominal pain and diarrhea. The next day, she has decreased urine output. Petechial hemorrhages on the skin. 37C, pulse 90, resp 18, BP 9
- E. coli. This girl has hemolytic-uremic syndrome. Some strains of E coli, which can contaminate ground beef products, may elaborate a toxin that damages endothelium, causing this syndrome. Hemolytic-uremic syndrome most often occurs in children and is one of the most important causes of acute renal failure in children.
- A 17 year old boy is involved in a motor vehicle accident in which he sustains severe blunt trauma to the extremities and abdomen. Over the next 3 days, he develops oliguria and dark-brown colored urine. The urine dipstick analysis is positive for myoglo
- Acute tubular necrosis. This patient suffered from muscle injury that resulted in myoglobinemia and myoglobinuria. The large amount of excreted myoglobin produces a toxic acute tubular necrosis. With supportive care, the tubular epithelium can regenerate, and renal function can be restored. During the recovery phase of acute tubular necrosis, patients excrete large volumes of urine, because the glomerular filtrate cannot be adequately reabsorbed by the damaged tubular epithelium.
- A 45 year old man has had headaches, nausea, and vomiting that have worsened over the past 5 days. He has started "seeing spots" before his eyes. BP 268/150. Urinalysis 1+ proteinuria 2+ hematuria, no glucose, ketones, or leukocytes. Serum urea
- Hyperplastic arteriolosclerosis. This patient has malignant hypertension, which may follow long-standing benign hypertension. Two types of vascular lesions are found in malignant hypertension. Fibrinoid necrosis of the arterioles may be present; in addition, there is intimal thickening in interlobular arteries and arterioles, caused by proliferation of smooth muscle cells and collagen deposition. The proliferating smooth muscle cells are concentrically arranged, and these lesions, called hyperplastic arteriolosclerosis, cause severe narrowing of the lumen. The resultant ischemia elevates the renin level, which further promotes vasoconstriction to potentiate the injury.
- 62 year old man has had several episodes of hematuria over the past week. He has not experienced increased urinary frequency or dysuria. No remarkable physical findings. Urinalysis shows 4+ hematuria. Urine culture is negative. Cytoscopy is performed and
- Smoking cigarettes. Cigarette smoking is the greatest risk factor in half of all men with such cancers. Schistosomiasis is also a risk factor for bladder cancer, although typically for squamous cell carcinoma
- 38 year old woman has been feeling tired and lethargic for several months. Afebrile, BP 140/90. Hgb 10.3, hct 30.9%, platelets 310,000, WBC 5585. Serum creatinine 5.8. C3 nephritic factor is present in serum, and the ANA test result is negative. Urinalys
- Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis. This patient has type II membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis, or dense-deposit disease, which usually leads to chronic renal failure
- How is postinfectious glomerulonephritis often characterized morphologically
- Hypercellular glomerulus with infiltration of polymorphonuclear leukocytes but no basement membrane thickening
- A rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis is marked by what
- Crescents
- When is the term "chronic glomerulonephritis" used
- When sclerosis of many glomeruli is present with no clear cause
- 60 year old man presents with a feeling of fullness in has abdomen and a 5kg weight loss over the past 6 months. Physical exam normal. Hgb 8.2, hct 24%, MCV 70. Urinalysis 3+ hematuria but no protein, glucose, or leukocytes. Ab CT shows 11cm mass in the
- Homozygous loss of the von Hippel Lindau (VHL) gene. Clear cell carcinoma, the most common form of kidney cancer, often presents with painless hematuria, most often in persons in the 6th or 7th decade. Approximately 80% of sporadic clear cell carcinomas show loss of both alleles of the VHL gene. Germ-line inheritance of the VHL mutation can give rise to von Hippel Lindau syndrome, with peak incidence of renal cell carcinoma in the 4th decade, and they may have other tumors including cerebellar and retinal hemangiomas and adrenal pheochromocytomas
- Mutation of the MET gene on chromosome 7 is associated with what type of cancer
- Papillary variant of renal cell carcinoma
- 45 year old Hispanic man has had increasing malaise with headaches and easy fatigability for the past 3 months. Physical exam reveals his blood pressure is 200/100. There are no palpable abdominal masses and no costovertebral tenderness. Hgb 9.5, hct 28.
- Dysfunction of the podocyte slit diaphragm apparatus. Corticosteroid-resistant hematuria and proteinuria in a Hispanic male leading to hypertension and renal failure is typical for focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS). FSGS is now the most common cause of nephrotic syndrome in adults in the US. Specialized extracellular areas overlying the glomerular basement membrane between adjacent foot processes of podocytes are slit diaphragms, and these exert control over glomerular permeability. Mutations in genes affecting several proteins including nephrin and podocin have been found in inherited cases of FSGS, and their dysfunction, possibly caused by cytokines or unknown toxic factors, is believed to be responsible for the acquired cases of FSGS. FSGS is also seen in patients with HIV-associated nephropathy
- What is nephrotic syndrome characterized by
- Increased basement membrane permeability, permitting the urinary loss of plasma proteins, particulary low-weight proteins, such as albumin
- What nephrotic syndrome is characterized by no visible membrane changes; fused epithelial foot processes; lipid accumulation in renal tubular cells
- Minimal change disease (lipoid nephrosis)
- What nephrotic syndrome is characterized by no visible basement membrane changes; segmental sclerosis of scattered juxtamedulary glomeruli
- Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis
- What nephrotic syndrome is characterized by basement membrane markedly thickened by intramembranous and epimembranous (subepithelial) immune complex deposits; granular immunofluorescence; "spike and dome" apearance
- Membranous glomerulonephritis
- What nephrotic syndrome is characterized by basement membrane thickened; diffuse or nodular mesangial accumulations of basement membrane-like material
- Diabetic nephropathy
- What nephrotic syndrome is characterized by amyloid protein identified by special stains (Congo red), birefringence under polarized light, or electron microscopic criss-cross fibrillary pattern
- Renal amyloidosis
- What nephrotic syndrome is characterized by immune complex deposition in subendothelial location that may manifest as membranous glomerulonephritis
- Lupus nephropathy
- How is nephritic syndrome characterized
- Inflammatory rupture of the glomerular capillaries, with resultant bleeding into the urinary space; proteinuria and edema may be present but usually are mild
- What nephritic syndrome is characterized by subepithelial electron-dense "humps" and "lumpy-bumpy" immunofluorescence
- Poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis
- What nephritic syndrome is characterized by crescents, ANCA-negative forms with immune complexes or antiglomerular basement membrane antibodies; ANCA positive form with Wegener granulomatosis
- Rapidly progressive (crescentic) glomerulonephritis
- What type of nephritic syndrome is characterized by linear immunofluorescence caused by antiglomerular basement membrane antibodies
- Goodpasture syndrome
- What type of nephritic syndrome is characterized by split basement membranes
- Alport syndrome
- What glomerular disorder is characterized by mesangial IgA deposits
- IgA nephropathy (Berger disease)
- What glomerular disorder is characterized by tram-track appearance; deposits of C3, and dense deposits in one variant
- Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis
- Define glomerulonephritis
- Renal disease characterized by inflammatory changes in glomeruli which are not the result of infection of the kidneys
- Define glomerulosclerosis
- Hyaline deposits or scarring within the renal glomeruli, a degenerative process occuring in association with renal arteriosclerosis or diabetes
- Define nephritis
- Inflammation of the kidneys
- Define pyelonephritis
- Inflammation of the renal parenchyma, calices, and pelvis, particularly due to local bacterial infection
- Define interstitial nephritis
- A form of nephritis in which the interstitial connective tissue is chiefly affected
- Define tubulointerstitial nephritis
- Nephritis affecting renal tubules and interstitial tissue, with infiltration by plasma cells and mononuclear cells; seen in lupus nephritis, allograft rejection, and methicillin sensitization.