Title: Tubulointerstitial Diseases
1Tubulointerstitial Diseases
2Objectives
- By the end of this session the student should be
able to - Describe the types of Acute tubular necrosis and
its clinical importance - Know the features of Acute and Chronic
pyelonephritis, and the risk factors - Understand the special issues in Drug-induced
interstitial nephritis
3Tubulointerstitial Diseases
- Acute tubular necrosis
- Acute pyelonephritis
- Chronic Pyelonephritis
- Drug-induced interstitial nephritis
4Acute Tubular Necrosis
- The most common cause of acute renal failure
- Clinicopathological entity
- Reversible lesion
- Destruction of tubular epithelium
- Acute suppression of renal function (urine
gt400ml/day)
5Causes of acute renal failure
- Pre renal, renal, post renal
- Acute tubular necrosis
- Glomerular disease. RPGN
- Vascular disease. Polyarteritis nodosa
- Acute papillary necrosis
- Diffuse cortical necrosis
6Types of Acute Tubular Necrosis
- 1. Ischemic
- 2. Nephrotoxic
7Types of Acute Tubular Necrosis
- 1. Ischemic
- State of hypoperfusion
- Eg. Trauma, septicemia, acute pancreatitis,
hypotension, shock
8Types of Acute Tubular Necrosis
- 2. Nephrotoxic
- Heavy metals mercury
- CaCl4
- Antibiotics. Gentamicin
9Pathogenesis
- 1. Tubular injury
- 2. Blood flow disturbance (persistent, severe),
(Endothelial cell injury)
10Pathogenesis
- 1. Tubular injury
- Sensitive to ischemia and toxins
- Injury
- Functional defect increase Na delivery to distal
tubules vasoconstriction - Cytokines vasoconstriction
- Tubular debris block urine outflow increase
the pressure - Fluid leak in interstitium collapse of tubules
11Pathogenesis
- 1. Tubular injury
- 2. Blood flow disturbance (persistent, severe),
(Endothelial cell injury)
12Pathogenesis
- 2. Blood flow disturbance (persistent, severe),
(Endothelial cell injury) - Vasoconstriction
- Endothelial injury release of endothelin,
decrease in nitric oxide - Others renin-angiotensin, norepinephrine)
13Pathogenesis
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15Morphology
- Subtle findings, similar in ischemic and toxic
- Interstitium- edema, mild acute inflammation
- Proximal tubules
- Necrosis
- Rupture of basement membrane
- Proteinaceous cast in distal and collecting
tubules - Tamm-Horsfall protein
- Epithelial regeneration
16Clinical course
- 1. Initiating phase 36 hours
- Hypotension, decrease urine output, rising urea
- 2. Maintenance phase 2-6 days
- Low urine output 50-400 ml/day
- Ureamia, fluid overload
- 3. Recovery
- Increase urine output (upto 3L/day)
- Electrolyte imbalance
- Risk of infections
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18Tubulointerstitial nephritis
- Causes
- Infectious Bacterial, viral, fungal, parasitic
- Non-infectious Physical (radiation) Chemical
(toxins, drugs), metabolic, Ischemic, Immune - Acute pyelonephritis
- Chronic pylelonephritis
19Acute Pyelonephritis
- UTI
- Commonly bacterial
- Gram negative E.coli, Proteus, Klebsiella,
Pseudomonas, Enterobacter - Risk factors
- Anomalies, Instrumentation,
- Obstruction, bladder dysfunction, reflux
- Pregnancy
- DM. Immunosuppression
20Acute Pyelonephritis
- Routes of infections
- Hematogenous
- Ascending infection
- Adhesion to mucosa colonization of urethra
ascending of infection - Femalegtmale
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23Acute Pyelonephritis
- Morphology
- One or both kidneys
- Sharp yellow abscess on the surface
- Necrosis, pus (neutrophils)
- WBC casts
- Pyonephrosis
- Papillary necrosis (DM, obstruction, Analgesic)
- Sharp yellow necrosis at the apex of the pyramid
- Cystitis hypertrophy, trabeculation
24Acute Pyelonephritis
- Symptoms
- Pain at the costovertebral angle, fever, chills,
malaise - Urine pyuria, bacteria
- Dysuria, frequencey, urgency
- Natural history
- Self-limiting
- Recurrent
- chronic
25Chronic Pyelonephritis
- Interstitial inflammation and scarring with
deformity of the pelvicalyceal system - 1. Chronic obstructive pyelonephritis
- Recurrent infections
- 2. Reflux nephropathy
- Vesico-ureteral reflux
- infections
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28Chronic Pyelonephritis
- Morphology
- One or both kidneys
- Uneven scarring/inflammation (lymphocytes, plasma
cells) - Papillary blunting and calyceal deformities
- Dilation/atrophy of tubules, colloid casts
(thyoidization) - Vascular changes
- Secondary focal segmental glomerulosclerosis
29Chronic Pyelonephritis
- Clinical
- Late presentation renal insufficiency,
hypertension - Contracted kidneys
- Tubular dysfunction polyruia/nocturia
30Drug-induced interstitial nephritis
- Acute drug-induced interstitial nephritis
- Antibiotics
- NSAIDs
- Diuretics
- Begin 15 days after exposure
- Fever, eosinophilia, rash
- acute renal failure, hematuria, proteinuria
31Drug-induced interstitial nephritis
- Acute drug-induced interstitial nephritis
- Pathogenesis
- Immune mechanism, hypersensitivity
- Drug is trapped in the kidney during secretion
- Results in injury
- ? Type I, high IgE
- ? Type IV, granuloma
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33Drug-induced interstitial nephritis
- Acute drug-induced interstitial nephritis
- Morphology
- Edema
- Inflammatory infiltrate lymphocytes,
macrophages, eosinophils - Sometimes granulomas
- NSAIDs may cause minimal change disease
34Drug-induced interstitial nephritis
- Analgesic Nephropathy
- Chronic users
- Chronic interstitial nephritis
- Renal papillary necrosis
- Aspirin, acetaminophen, caffeine, codeine
35Drug-induced interstitial nephritis
- Analgesic Nephropathy
- Pathogenesis
- Unclear, papillary necrosis, inflammation
- Oxidative damage
- Aspirin inhibits prostaglandin synthesis
(vasoconstriction)
36Drug-induced interstitial nephritis
- Analgesic Nephropathy
- Morphology
- Papillae yellow brown, lipofuscin pigment
- inflammation
- Coagulative necrosis
- Clacification
- Scarring
- Vessels basement membrane thickening (analgesic
microangiopathy)
37Drug-induced interstitial nephritis
- Analgesic Nephropathy
- Clinical
- Chronic renal failure
- Hypertension
- Anemia
- Increase risk of transitional cell carcinoma
38Case presentation
39- A twelve-year-old boy presents to his family
physician with a history of a sore throat and
fever. The sore throat began about 3 days
previously a fever of 39C developed in the last
day. Physical examination reveals a
well-developed, well-nourished boy of appropriate
size for age in mild distress. His temperature is
39.5C, pulse 90 (nl 60-100/min), blood pressure
100/75, and respirations 20 (nl 8-16/min).
Examination of the oropharynx reveals a red,
inflamed throat and tonsils with exudate.
Otherwise, the exam is unremarkable.
40- A swab from his throat is used to test for the
presence of streptococcal antigens (streptozyme
test), and it is positive. When the physician
suggests an injection of penicillin, the child
throws a wall-eyed fit, and the physician
relents, prescribing a ten-day course of
ampicillin.
41- After two or three days of treatment, the boy
begins to feel better, and has less throat pain.
However, his mother notes a red, macular rash
over his chest and back, and the boy complains of
itching. Calamine lotion is applied for a day or
two without relief, and the fever recurs, this
time with the complaint of joint aches. When the
child becomes listless and loses his appetite,
his mother returns him to the doctor, who
performs further lab tests
42- Urinalysis
- pH 7, yellow-brown
- protein - 2
- blood - 1
- glucose - neg
- leukocyte esterase - 3
43- Micro
- 5-10 RBCs/HPF
- 10-20 WBCs/HPF
- no bacteria
- few hyaline casts
- (nl 0-2 RBCs or WBCs/HPF)
44- WBC
- 12,000/mm3
- 52 neutrophils
- 5 bands
- 28 lymphocytes
- 15 eosinophils
45- Creatinine 2.1 mg/dL
- BUN 40 mg/dL
- ASO 350 U/mL
- Liver function tests normal
- 24-hour urine protein 500 mg/24 hr
46- The child is hospitalized, and a renal biopsy is
performed. The ampicillin is discontinued, a
course of tapering steroids is begun, and the
patient is discharged.
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48Objectives
- By the end of this session the student should be
able to - Describe the types of Acute tubular necrosis and
its clinical importance - Know the features of Acute and Chronic
pyelonephritis, and the risk factors - Understand the special issues in Drug-induced
interstitial nephritis