What are causes of nephrotic syndrome?
Nephrotic syndrome may be caused by primary glomerular disorders (80–90% of cases) and/or systemic diseases and toxic exposures (10–20% of cases)
What is one form of nephrotic syndrome and it’s causes?
Primary (idiopathic) forms: The following types of nephrotic syndrome are commonly associated with other conditions
Minimal change disease
Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis
Membranous nephropathy
Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (can manifest as nephrotic or nephritic syndrome)
What is the other form of nephrotic syndrome and it’s causes?
Secondary forms
Diabetic nephropathy
Amyloid nephropathy: can be associated with multiple myeloma (AL amyloidosis) or chronic inflammatory disease such as rheumatoid arthritis (AA amyloidosis)
Lupus nephritis (can manifest as nephrotic or nephritic syndrome)
What are classic manifestations of nephrotic syndrome?
Massive proteinuria > 3.5 g/24 hours
Edema
Typically starts with periorbital edema
Peripheral edema (pitting)
Pleural effusion
Pericardial effusion
Ascites
In severe cases, anasarca
Hypoalbuminemia
Hyperlipidemia
What can be other clinical features of nephrotic syndrome?
Hypercoagulable state with increased risk of thrombosis and embolic events (e.g., pulmonary embolism, renal vein thrombosis)
Increased susceptibility to infection
Hypertension in some cases
Possibly frothy urine
Symptoms of hypocalcemia (e.g., tetany, paresthesia, muscle spasms)
Symptoms of the underlying disease (e.g., malar rash in lupus nephritis)
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