Glomerulonephritis is a common kidney disease. As a rule, the renal glomeruli are affected (to a lesser extent, the interstitial tissue and tubules). If the disease is chronic, the symptoms may be almost invisible or completely absent. But if the disease is acute, then this condition can lead to serious complications that can lead to disability of a person at an early age.
Glomerulonephritis refers to inflammatory diseases of the urinary system. Those, in turn, affect the functioning of not only the kidneys, but also the functioning of the heart. This is explained by the fact that the work of the cardiac and renal systems is connected, therefore, signs such as increased blood pressure or other symptoms of diseases of the cardiovascular system are often concomitant symptoms for diseases of the urinary system. Therefore, it is necessary to start treatment of glomerulonephritis on time to avoid many negative consequences.
At the same time, the success of treatment largely depends on the timeliness of contacting a doctor. It is necessary to pay attention to such signs of pathology as the appearance of edema and blood in the urine.
General information
With glomerulonephritis, damage occurs to the glomeruli - the glomeruli of the kidneys. Most often this occurs due to an infectious or inflammatory process, but other causes may also influence the appearance of pathology.
According to statistics, glomerulonephritis is one of the three most common kidney diseases occurring in adult patients. The danger is that this disease often leads to disability due to the development of chronic renal failure if treatment is not started in time.
At the same time, there is one very interesting pattern. The use of effective antibacterial treatment can reduce the proportion of acute glomerulonephritis, but the number of patients whose disease becomes chronic is steadily growing. This situation is explained by poor quality nutrition, as well as environmental degradation.
Most often, glomerulonephritis is diagnosed in adult patients under 40-50 years of age. But the disease also occurs in childhood. Moreover, men suffer from it much more often than women.
How is glomerulonephritis treated today?
Since this is a fairly serious disease, therapy is possible only in a hospital setting, especially in the phase of pronounced symptoms or in the presence of renal failure. Modern treatment of glomerulonephritis is a complex of measures, of which the most important is given to drug therapy, which, depending on the characteristics of the course of the disease, includes:
- antibacterial drugs to fight streptococci or other infections that provoke the development of inflammation of the renal glomeruli;
- antifungal medications if the disease is caused by a fungal infection;
- anti-inflammatory drugs to reduce inflammation in the kidneys;
- symptomatic medications - antihypertensives, diuretics, immunosuppressants, anticoagulants, etc.
Severe renal failure requires hemodialysis. If the kidney is seriously damaged, a transplant may be needed.
One of the powerful therapeutic factors is a special diet for glomerulonephritis, which reduces the load on the kidneys, allowing the tissues to recover. It is based on the limitation:
- table salt – no more than 3-5 grams per day;
- proteins – no more than 80 grams per day;
- carbohydrates – no more than 350 grams per day;
- fats – no more than 90 grams per day.
The main dishes are cereal soups with potatoes, cereal porridges, pasta, herbs and vegetables, low-fat dairy products, low-fat fish, meat and poultry. Pickles and smoked foods, fried foods, sausages, chocolate, legumes, and canned food are completely excluded. In the hospital, patients receive food as part of diet No. 7, but even after discharge it is recommended to adhere to food restrictions.
Main symptoms of glomerulonephritis
The acute course of the disease is characterized by 3 main groups of symptoms:
- urinary – increased red blood cells and protein in the urine;
- edematous – swelling of the arms, legs and face;
- hypertensive – an increase in blood pressure that cannot be reduced with conventional blood pressure medications.
It all starts with an increase in body temperature, a headache begins, and the general condition worsens. Swelling of the eyelids is visible, appetite decreases, and the skin turns pale.
Another telltale sign is a change in urine color caused by blood. In 85% of cases, microhematuria develops, in 15% - macrohematuria (this condition is characterized by a change in the color of urine to a very dark color).
Another symptom of glomerulonephritis in adults is facial swelling. It is very pronounced in the morning, gradually disappearing during the day.
Other symptoms include:
- gagging;
- pain in the lumbar region;
- urge to urinate;
- swelling of the limbs.
Diagnostics
In the medical setting of this diagnosis, a nephrologist is involved. To clarify the disease, the following are prescribed:
- general urinalysis - the presence of red blood cells, protein;
- Zimnitsky test - to detect a decrease in the volume of urination;
- general blood test - signs of inflammation are determined;
- biochemical blood test - increased urea, creatinine, residual nitrogen;
- ultrasound examination of the kidneys;
- performing a biopsy in doubtful cases.
Symptoms according to the form of the disease
Each form of glomerulonephritis has its own signs and symptoms. The acute stage occurs in different ways: some patients have severe symptoms, others have them, but are not so intense. The main features include:
- swelling;
- general weakness, feverish state;
- strong thirst;
- increased blood pressure;
- blood in urine.
This stage develops within three weeks from the moment of infection. The peculiarity of acute glomerulonephritis in children is that it often leads to recovery, while in adults, the acute form is more pronounced, becoming chronic (without proper treatment).
The chronic form of glomerulonephritis is characterized by the death of the renal glomeruli, which are replaced by connective tissue.
If drug therapy fails to get rid of the inflammatory process, the situation may worsen due to various complications. Moreover, if you start the course of chronic glomerulonephritis, the kidneys will become wrinkled in the later stages of this process, i.e. There is a real danger to life if therapy is not started.
Publications in the media
Chronic glomerulonephritis (CGN, slowly progressive glomerular disease, chronic nephritic syndrome) is a group concept that includes diseases of the glomeruli of the kidney with a common immune mechanism of damage and a gradual deterioration of renal function with the development of renal failure.
CLASSIFICATION
Clinical (Tareev E.M., Tareeva I.E., 1958, 1972) • By form •• Latent form •• Hematuric form (see Berger’s disease) •• Hypertensive form •• Nephrotic form •• Mixed form • By phases •• Exacerbation (active phase) - increasing changes in urine (proteinuria and/or hematuria), the appearance of acute nephritic or nephrotic syndrome, decreased renal function •• Remission - improvement or normalization of extrarenal manifestations (edema, arterial hypertension), renal function and changes in urine.
Morphological (Serov V.V. et al., 1978, 1983) includes eight forms of CGN • Diffuse proliferative glomerulonephritis (see Acute glomerulonephritis) • Glomerulonephritis with crescents (see Rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis) • Mesangioproliferative glomerulonephritis • Membranous glomerulonephritis • Membrano-pro proliferative ( mesangiocapillary) glomerulonephritis • Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis • Fibroplastic glomerulonephritis.
Statistical data. Incidence is 13–50 cases per 10,000 population. Primary CGN occurs 2 times more often in men than in women, secondary - depending on the underlying disease. It can develop at any age, but is most common in children 3–7 years old and adults 20–40 years old.
Etiology
• The same etiological factor can cause different morphological and clinical variants of nephropathies and, conversely, different causes can cause the same morphological variant of damage.
• Diffuse proliferative - see Acute glomerulonephritis.
• Glomerulonephritis with crescents (see Rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis).
• Mesangioproliferative glomerulonephritis - hemorrhagic vasculitis, chronic viral hepatitis B, Crohn's disease, Sjögren's syndrome, ankylosing spondylitis, adenocarcinomas.
• Membranous glomerulonephritis - carcinomas of the lung, intestines, stomach, mammary glands and kidneys (paraneoplastic glomerulonephritis), non-Hodgken lymphoma, leukemia, SLE (see Lupus nephritis), viral hepatitis B, syphilis, filariasis, malaria, schistosomiasis, exposure to drugs (gold preparations and mercury, as well as trimethadione and penicillamine).
• Membrane-proliferative glomerulonephritis - idiopathic, as well as secondary to SLE, cryoglobulinemia, chronic viral (HCV) or bacterial infections, drugs, toxins.
• CGN with minimal changes - idiopathic, as well as acute respiratory infections, vaccinations, NSAIDs, rifampicin or a-IFN, Fabry disease, diabetes, lymphoproliferative pathology (Hodgken lymphoma).
• Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis - idiopathic, as well as sickle cell anemia, kidney transplant rejection, cyclosporine, surgical excision of part of the renal parenchyma, chronic vesicoureteral reflux, heroin use, congenital pathology (nephron dysgenesis, late stages of Fabry disease), HIV infection.
Pathogenesis
• Immune mechanisms are involved in the development and maintenance of inflammation •• Immunocomplex •• Antibody (autoantigenic) •• Activation of complement, attraction of circulating monocytes, synthesis of cytokines, release of proteolytic enzymes and oxygen radicals, activation of the coagulation cascade, production of pro-inflammatory PGs.
• In addition to immune and non-immune mechanisms, the progression of CGN involves •• Intraglomerular hypertension and hyperfiltration •• Proteinuria (nephrotoxic effects of proteinuria have been proven) •• Hyperlipidemia •• Excessive formation of oxygen free radicals and accumulation of lipid peroxidation products •• Excessive calcium deposition •• Intercurrent recurrent urinary tract infections.
Pathomorphology depends on the morphological form of CGN. In any form, signs of sclerosis of varying degrees are revealed in the glomeruli and interstitium - synechiae, sclerotic glomeruli, tubular atrophy. Proliferation and activation of mesangial cells play a key role in the processes of accumulation and changes in the structure of the extracellular matrix, which ends in sclerosis of the glomerulus. Pathomorphological changes are of exceptional importance for the diagnosis of glomerulonephritis, because Diagnosis almost always requires a biopsy of the kidney tissue.
• Diffuse proliferative - diffuse increase in the number of glomerular cells due to infiltration by neutrophils and monocytes and proliferation of glomerular endothelium and mesangial cells.
• Glomerulonephritis with crescents (rapidly progressive) - see Glomerulonephritis, rapidly progressive.
• Mesangioproliferative - proliferation of mesangial cells and matrix.
• Membrane-proliferative - diffuse proliferation of mesangial cells and infiltration of glomeruli by macrophages; increase in mesangial matrix, thickening and doubling of the basement membrane.
• CGN with minimal changes - light microscopy without pathology, with electron microscopy - disappearance of podocyte feet.
• Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis - segmental collapse of capillaries in less than 50% of glomeruli with deposition of amorphous hyaline material.
• Membranous - diffuse thickening of the glomerular basement membrane with the formation of subepithelial projections surrounding immune complex deposits (a jagged appearance of the basement membrane).
• Fibroplastic glomerulonephritis is the outcome of most glomerulopathies and is characterized by the severity of fibrotic processes.
Clinical manifestations • Symptoms appear 3-7 days after exposure to the provoking factor (latent period), they can also be detected accidentally during a medical examination • Recurrent episodes of hematuria • Edema, urinary syndrome, arterial hypertension in various variants - nephrotic or acute nephritic syndrome (nephrotic form, mixed form - up to 10%, hypertensive form - 20–30%) • Possible combination of manifestations of acute nephritic and nephrotic syndromes • Complaints of headache, darkening of urine, swelling and decreased diuresis • Objectively - pastiness or swelling, increased blood pressure, expansion of boundaries heart to the left • Body temperature is normal or subfebrile.
Clinical manifestations in various clinical forms
• Latent CGN (50–60%) •• No edema or arterial hypertension •• In urine proteinuria no more than 1-3 g/day, microhematuria, leukocyturia, casts (hyaline and erythrocyte) •• Can transform into nephrotic or hypertensive forms • • The development of chronic renal failure occurs over 10–20 years.
• Hypertensive chronic hepatitis •• Clinical manifestations of arterial hypertension syndrome •• There is slight proteinuria in the urine, sometimes microhematuria, cylindruria •• Chronic renal failure develops over 15–25 years.
• Hematuric CGN •• In the urine - recurrent or persistent hematuria and minimal proteinuria (less than 1 g/day) •• There are no extrarenal symptoms •• CGN develops in 20–40% over 5–25 years.
• Nephrotic form - clinical and laboratory manifestations of nephrotic syndrome.
• Mixed form •• Combination of nephrotic syndrome, arterial hypertension and/or hematuria •• It is usually noted with secondary CGN, systemic diseases (SLE, systemic vasculitis) •• CRF develops within 2–3 years.
Clinical picture depending on the morphological form
• Mesangioproliferative CGN •• Isolated urinary syndrome •• Acute nephritic or nephrotic syndrome •• Macro- or microhematuria - Berger's disease •• CKD develops slowly.
• Membranous CGN manifests itself as nephrotic syndrome (80%).
• Membrane-proliferative CGN •• Begins with acute nephritic syndrome, in 50% of patients - nephrotic syndrome •• Isolated urinary syndrome with hematuria •• Arterial hypertension, hypocomplementemia, anemia, cryoglobulinemia are characteristic •• The course is progressive, sometimes rapidly progressive.
• Glomerulonephritis with minimal changes •• Nephrotic syndrome, in 20-30% of cases with microhematuria •• Arterial hypertension and renal failure occur rarely.
• Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis •• Nephrotic syndrome •• Erythrocyturia, leukocyturia in the urine •• Arterial hypertension •• Chronic renal failure is a natural development.
• Fibroplastic glomerulonephritis •• Nephrotic syndrome (up to 50%) •• Chronic renal failure •• Arterial hypertension.
Laboratory data
• In the blood - a moderate increase in ESR (with secondary CGN, a significant increase can be detected, which depends on the primary disease), an increase in the level of CEC, antistreptolysin O, a decrease in the content of complement in the blood (immune complex CGN), with Berger's disease an increase in the IgA content is detected.
• Reduced concentrations of total protein and albumin (significantly in nephrotic syndrome), increased concentrations of a2- and b-globulins, hypogammaglobulinemia in nephrotic syndrome. In secondary CGN caused by systemic connective tissue diseases (lupus nephritis), g-globulins may be increased. Hyper- and dyslipidemia (nephrotic form).
• Decreased GFR, increased levels of urea and creatinine, anemia, metabolic acidosis, hyperphosphatemia, etc. (AKI due to chronic renal failure or chronic renal failure).
• In the urine there is erythrocyturia, proteinuria (massive in nephrotic syndrome), leukocyturia, casts are granular, waxy (in nephrotic syndrome).
Instrumental data • With ultrasound or survey urography, the size of the kidneys is normal or reduced (with chronic renal failure), the contours are smooth, the echogenicity is diffusely increased • X-ray of the chest organs - expansion of the borders of the heart to the left (with arterial hypertension) • ECG - signs of left ventricular hypertrophy • Kidney biopsy ( light, electron microscopy, immunofluorescence study) allows you to clarify the morphological form, activity of CGN, and exclude kidney diseases with similar symptoms.
Diagnostics . If diuresis decreases, dark urine appears, edema or pastiness of the face, or blood pressure increases (may be normal), a set of studies is carried out: measurement of blood pressure, total blood flow, total blood volume, determination of daily proteinuria, total protein concentration and evaluate the proteinogram, lipid content in the blood. An in-depth physical and clinical laboratory examination is aimed at identifying the possible cause of CGN - a general or systemic disease. Ultrasound (x-ray) of the kidneys allows you to clarify the size and density of the kidneys. Assessment of kidney function - Reberg-Tareev test, determination of the concentration of urea and/or creatinine in the blood. The diagnosis is confirmed by a kidney biopsy.
Differential diagnosis: with chronic pyelonephritis, acute glomerulonephritis, nephropathy of pregnancy, chronic tubulo-interstitial nephritis, alcoholic kidney damage, amyloidosis and diabetic nephropathy, as well as kidney damage in diffuse connective tissue diseases (primarily SLE) and systemic vasculitis.
TREATMENT
General tactics • Hospitalization in case of exacerbation of CGN, newly diagnosed CGN, newly diagnosed chronic renal failure • Diet with restriction of table salt (for edema, arterial hypertension), protein (for chronic renal failure, exacerbation of CGN) • Impact on the etiological factor (infection, tumors, drugs ) • Immunosuppressive therapy - GCs and cytostatics - for exacerbation of CGN (indicated also for azotemia, if it is caused by the activity of CGN) • Antihypertensive drugs • Antiplatelet agents, anticoagulants • Antihyperlipidemic drugs • Diuretics.
Immunosuppressive therapy
• GCs are indicated for mesangioproliferative CGN and CGN with minimal glomerular changes. With membranous CGN, the effect is unclear. For membrane-proliferative CGN and focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, GCs are ineffective • Prednisolone is prescribed at 1 mg/kg/day orally for 6–8 weeks, followed by a rapid decrease to 30 mg/day (5 mg/week), and then slowly (2.5–1.25 mg/week) until complete withdrawal •• Pulse therapy with prednisolone is carried out with high CGN activity in the first days of treatment - 1000 mg IV drip 1 r/day for 3 days in a row. After CGN activity decreases, monthly pulse therapy is possible until remission is achieved.
• Cytostatics (cyclophosphamide 2-3 mg/kg/day orally or intramuscularly or intravenously, chlorambucil 0.1–0.2 mg/kg/day orally, as alternative drugs: cyclosporine - 2.5 –3.5 mg/kg/day orally, azathioprine 1.5–3 mg/kg/day orally) are indicated for active forms of CGN with a high risk of progression of renal failure, as well as in the presence of contraindications for the use of GCs, ineffectiveness or complications. when using the latter (in the latter case, combined use is preferred, allowing to reduce the dose of GC). Pulse therapy with cyclophosphamide is indicated for high CGN activity, either in combination with pulse therapy with prednisolone (or against the background of daily oral prednisolone), or alone without additional prescription of prednisolone; in the latter case, the dose of cyclophosphamide should be 15 mg/kg (or 0.6–0.75 g/m2 body surface area) IV monthly.
• The simultaneous use of GC and cytostatics is considered more effective than GC monotherapy. It is generally accepted to prescribe immunosuppressive drugs in combination with antiplatelet agents, anticoagulants - the so-called multicomponent regimens: •• 3-component regimen (without cytostatics) ••• Prednisolone 1–1.5 mg/kg/day orally for 4–6 weeks, then 1 mg/day kg/day every other day, then reduced by 1.25–2.5 mg/week until discontinuation ••• Heparin 5000 IU 4 times a day for 1–2 months with a transition to phenindione or acetylsalicylic acid at a dose of 0.25 –0.125 g/day, or sulodexide at a dose of 250 IU 2 times/day orally ••• Dipyridamole 400 mg/day orally or intravenously •• 4-component Kinkaid-Smith regimen ••• Prednisolone 25–30 mg/day daily orally for 1–2 months, then reduce the dose by 1.25–2.5 mg/week until discontinuation ••• Cyclophosphamide 200 mg IV daily or double dose every other day for 1–2 months, then half dose until remission decreases (cyclophosphamide can be replaced with chlorambucil or azathioprine) ••• Heparin 5000 units 4 times a day for 1–2 months with a transition to phenindione or acetylsalicylic acid, or sulodexide ••• Dipyridamole 400 mg/day orally or IV •• Ponticelli regimen: initiation of therapy with prednisolone - 3 consecutive days at 1000 mg/day, the next 27 days prednisolone 30 mg/day orally, 2nd month - chlorambucil 0.2 mg/kg •• Steinberg regimen • •• Pulse therapy with cyclophosphamide: 1000 mg IV monthly for a year ••• In the next 2 years - once every 3 months ••• In the next 2 years - once every 6 months.
Symptomatic therapy
• Antihypertensive therapy •• ACE inhibitors have an antiproteinuric and nephroprotective effect, because, by reducing intraglomerular hyperfiltration and hypertension, they slow down the rate of progression of chronic renal failure: captopril 50–100 mg/day, enalapril 10–20 mg/day, ramipril 2 .5–10 mg/day •• Non-hydropyridine calcium channel blockers: verapamil at a dose of 120–320 mg/day, diltiazem at a dose of 160–360 mg/day, isradipine, etc.
• Diuretics - hydrochlorothiazide, furosemide, spironolactone.
•Antioxidant therapy (vitamin E), but there is no convincing evidence of its effectiveness.
• Lipid-lowering drugs (nephrotic syndrome): simvastatin, lovastatin, fluvastatin, atorvastatin at a dose of 10–60 mg/day for 4–6 weeks, followed by a dose reduction.
• Anticoagulants (in combination with GC and cytostatics, see above) • Heparin 5000 IU 4 times a day subcutaneously (under the control of the international normalized ratio [INR]) for at least 1–2 months; before discontinuation, the dose is reduced 2–3 days before •• Low molecular weight heparins: calcium nadroparin in a dose of 0.3–0.6 ml 1–2 times/day subcutaneously, sulodexide IM 600 IU 1 time/day for 20 days, then orally 250 IU 2 times a day.
• Antiplatelet agents (in combination with GCs, cytostatics, anticoagulants; see above) •• Dipyridamole 400–600 mg/day •• Pentoxifylline 0.2–0.3 g/day •• Ticlopidine 0.25 g 2 r /day •• Acetylsalicylic acid 0.25–0.5 g/day.
The following therapeutic measures are also used in the treatment of CGN (the effect of which has not been proven in controlled studies).
• NSAIDs (an alternative to prednisolone for low clinical activity of CGN): indomethacin 150 mg/day for 4–6 weeks, then 50 mg/day for 3–4 months (contraindicated in arterial hypertension and renal failure).
• Aminoquinoline derivatives (chloroquine, hydroxychloroquine) are prescribed in the absence of indications for active therapy for sclerosing forms, 0.25–0.2 g orally 2 times a day for 2 weeks, then 1 time a day.
• Plasmapheresis in combination with pulse therapy with prednisone and/or cyclophosphamide is indicated for highly active CGN and there is no effect from treatment with these drugs.
Treatment of individual morphological forms
• Mesangioproliferative CGN •• With slowly progressive forms, incl. with IgA nephritis, there is no need for immunosuppressive therapy •• With a high risk of progression - GCs and/or cytostatics •• 3- and 4-component regimens •• The effect of immunosuppressive therapy on long-term prognosis remains unclear.
• Membranous CGN •• Combined use of GCs and cytostatics •• Pulse therapy with cyclophosphamide 1000 mg IV monthly •• In patients without nephrotic syndrome and normal renal function - ACE inhibitors.
• Membrano-proliferative (mesangiocapillary) CGN •• Treatment of the underlying disease •• ACE inhibitors •• In the presence of nephrotic syndrome and decreased renal function, therapy with GC and cyclophosphamide with the addition of antiplatelet agents and anticoagulants is justified.
• CGN with minimal changes •• Prednisolone 1–1.5 mg/kg for 4 weeks, then 1 mg/kg every other day for another 4 weeks •• Cyclophosphamide or chlorambucil if prednisolone is ineffective or cannot be discontinued due to relapses •• For ongoing relapses of nephrotic syndrome - cyclosporine 3-5 mg/kg/day (children 6 mg/m2) 6-12 months after achieving remission.
• Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis •• Immunosuppressive therapy is not effective enough •• GC is prescribed for a long time - up to 16–24 weeks •• Patients with nephrotic syndrome are prescribed prednisolone 1–1.2 mg/kg daily for 3–4 months, then every other day for another 2 months month, then the dose is reduced until discontinuation •• Cytostatics (cyclophosphamide, cyclosporine) in combination with GC.
• Fibroplastic CGN •• With a focal process, treatment is carried out according to the morphological form that led to its development •• Diffuse form is a contraindication to active immunosuppressive therapy.
Treatment according to clinical forms is carried out if it is impossible to perform a kidney biopsy.
• Latent form •• Active immunosuppressive therapy is not indicated. For proteinuria >1.5 g/day, ACE inhibitors are prescribed.
• Hematuric form •• Inconsistent effect of prednisolone and cytostatics •• Patients with isolated hematuria and/or slight proteinuria - ACE inhibitors and dipyridamole.
• Hypertensive form •• ACE inhibitors; target blood pressure level is 120–125/80 mmHg •• For exacerbations, cytostatics are used as part of a 3-component regimen •• GC (prednisolone 0.5 mg/kg/day) can be prescribed as monotherapy or as part of combined regimens.
• Nephrotic form is an indication for a 3- or 4-component regimen.
• Mixed form - 3- or 4-component treatment regimen.
Surgical treatment • Kidney transplantation is complicated in 50% by relapse in the graft, in 10% by graft rejection.
Features of the course in children • More often than in adults, post-streptococcal nephritis with an outcome in recovery • Nephrotic syndrome up to 80% is caused by CGN with minimal changes.
Features of the course in pregnant women • The effect of pregnancy on the kidneys: function decreases, the frequency of secondary gestosis increases • The effect of CGN on pregnancy - three degrees of risk (Shekhtman M.M. et al., 1989): •• I degree (minimal) - pregnancy is possible allow (latent form) •• II degree (severe) - high risk (nephrotic form) •• III degree (maximum) - pregnancy is contraindicated (hypertensive and mixed forms, active CGN, chronic renal failure).
Complications • Renal failure, left ventricular failure, acute cerebrovascular accident, intercurrent infections, thrombosis.
Course and prognosis. The frequency of progression to chronic renal failure depends on the morphological form of CGN • Diffuse proliferative - 1-2% • Mesangioproliferative - 40% • Rapidly progressive - 90% • Membranous - 40% • Focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis - 50-80% • Membranous-proliferative - 50% • IgA nephropathy - 30–50%.
Reduction. CGN - chronic glomerulonephritis.
ICD-10 • N03 Chronic nephritic syndrome
Features of treatment
Regardless of the form of glomerulonephritis, all treatment is carried out exclusively in an inpatient setting. The length of hospitalization depends on the severity of the individual case.
The treatment regimen is determined by the attending physician. Here is just one of the possible options:
- Diet No. 7.
- Bed rest.
- Antibacterial therapy (erythromycin, oxacillin + ampicillin).
- Taking prednisolone and non-hormonal drugs to correct immunity.
During treatment, various drugs are also used to eliminate associated symptoms. These are diuretics to eliminate swelling, drugs to lower blood pressure, and anti-inflammatory drugs.
Medical recommendations are standard: exclude spicy, salty foods from the diet, refrain from smoking and drinking alcohol. You need to monitor your weight, periodically loading yourself with physical exercise.
The last stage is decompensation
Over time, the chronic disease leads to uremia, the last stage of decompensation. Significant amounts of urea and creatinine accumulate in human blood, which cannot be eliminated due to impaired renal function. Intoxication occurs. It is expressed by the following signs:
- headache;
- general weakness;
- diarrhea;
- vomiting;
- thirst.
The tongue and skin are dry, the patient quickly loses weight, which leads to cachexia, an extreme form of exhaustion of the body. Dystrophy of internal organs develops. Since the body cannot eliminate toxins naturally, it tries to get rid of them in other ways: through the skin and intestines. A person develops a strong ammonia odor from sweat and breath. Intoxication leads to increasing hypoxia (low oxygen content) of all tissues, and uremic coma occurs.
Possible complications
As a rule, complications are caused by chronic glomerulonephritis. The consequences can be quite serious:
- Kidney failure.
- Serious heart problems.
- Uremic coma.
- Nephritic encephalopathy.
Glomerulonephritis is a disease that often leads to early disability. It is important to begin conservative treatment when the first signs of the disease are detected.
At the end of therapy, sanatorium treatment is recommended. You need to be regularly monitored by a specialist.
Classification (forms)
In recent years, the classification of chronic glomerulonephritis has been changed. Previously, the disease was divided into types (species) based on symptoms. Today, classifications are based on pathomorphological changes, which are identified by examining a kidney biopsy.
In the CIS countries, the clinical classification , authored by E.M., Tareev. According to this division, there are the following forms of chronic glomerulonephritis:
- Hematuric
- Latent
- Nephrotic
- Hypertensive
- Mixed
According to the classification of Serov V.V. and other authors, based on pathomorphological characteristics the following forms of the disease can be distinguished:
- With half moons
- Diffuse proliferative
- Membranoproliferative
- Mesangioproliferative
- Minimal change nephropathy
- Membranous nephropathy
- Fibroplastic
- Fibrillar-immunotactoid
- Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis
Doctors believe that each of these forms can be acute or chronic.
Prevention
Glomerulonephritis can be prevented by following several effective preventive measures. Here are the main ones:
- Engage in an active hobby (especially if your job involves sitting for long periods of time).
- Stop or significantly limit alcohol consumption and smoking.
- Minimize the consumption of salty foods.
- Avoid hypothermia.
- Constant control of blood sugar (diabetes).
Glomerulonephritis is a progressive disease, the course of which can be stopped if the cause of the pathology is determined in time. Moreover, the overall picture is very favorable: most cases end in complete recovery (in about 30% of cases the disease progresses to the chronic stage).
In what cases does the disease develop?
Most often, streptococci or staphylococci become the impetus for the development of the inflammatory process in the renal glomeruli. Doctors consider the main causes of glomerulonephritis to be:
- acute viral infections - influenza, pneumonia, sore throat, scarlet fever;
- vaccination with “live” vaccines”;
- allergic reactions of the body;
- systemic diseases - lupus erythematosus, vasculitis.
You should not discount the accompanying unfavorable factors, first of all:
- chronic infections - caries, sinusitis, tonsillitis, viral hepatitis, etc.;
- uncontrolled use of medications;
- prolonged exposure to the sun;
- frequent consumption of salty foods;
- Presence of unhealthy habits – consumption of alcohol, drugs.
The inflammatory process occurs due to damage to the immune mechanism: antibodies form protein complexes with antigens left in the blood by the infection, and these proteins settle on the walls of the capillaries in the glomeruli. Blood circulation in the kidneys worsens, tissue cells begin to die, which is why the filtering function of the glomeruli deteriorates and the general intoxication of the body increases, which is expressed in a certain set of manifestations.
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Herbs for glomerulonephritis
Herbs are powerful medicines. In an individually selected combination, herbal infusions can provide a full range of “services” necessary in the treatment of glomerulonephritis: reduce blood pressure, eliminate swelling and inflammation, restore tissue, harmonize metabolism, remove toxins and reduce their formation, etc. Can herbal infusion completely replace drug therapy? The answer to this question is very individual. In any case, only a herbalist can select it after examining the patient and familiarizing himself with the results of laboratory and instrumental studies. A herbalist can carry out his own diagnostics, for example, using the method of determining the state of various body systems using the iris of the eye (iridology).
In the treatment of patients suffering from glomerulonephritis, other holistic methods of traditional medicine can be used - classical and resonant homeopathy, osteopathy, acupuncture, qigong therapy. An individually selected diet and exercise regimen play a big role.
Are the methods of classical medicine combined with traditional ones? Yes. The “proportion” is determined by the duration and severity of the disease, the individual characteristics of the body and the course of the disease, and the choice of the person himself.
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