Glomerular Diseases
Many
diseases affect kidney function by attacking the glomeruli,
the tiny units within the kidney where blood is cleaned.
Glomerular diseases include many conditions with a variety of
genetic and environmental causes, but they fall into two major
categories:
- Glomerulonephritis
(gloh-MEHR-yoo-loh-nef-RY-tis) describes the inflammation of
the membrane tissue in the kidney that serves as a filter,
separating wastes and extra fluid from the
blood.
- Glomerulosclerosis
(gloh-MEHR-yoo-loh-skleh-ROH-sis) describes the scarring or
hardening of the tiny blood vessels within the kidney.
Although
glomerulonephritis and glomerulosclerosis have different
causes, they can both lead to kidney
failure.
What are the
kidneys and what do they do?
The two
kidneys are bean-shaped organs located near the middle of the
back, just below the rib cage to the left and right of the
spine. Each about the size of a fist, these organs act as
sophisticated filters for the body. They process about 200
quarts of blood a day to sift out about 2 quarts of waste
products and extra water that eventually leave the body as
urine.
Blood
enters the kidneys through arteries that branch inside the
kidneys into tiny clusters of looping blood vessels. Each
cluster is called a glomerulus, which comes from the
Greek word meaning filter. The plural form of the word is
glomeruli. There are approximately 1 million
glomeruli, or filters, in each kidney. The glomerulus is
attached to the opening of a small fluid-collecting tube
called a tubule. Blood is filtered in the glomerulus,
and extra water and wastes pass into the tubule and become
urine. Eventually, the urine drains from the kidneys into the
bladder through larger tubes called
ureters.

Each
glomerulus-and-tubule unit is called a nephron. Each
kidney is composed of about 1 million nephrons. In healthy
nephrons, the glomerular membrane that separates the blood
vessel from the tubule allows waste products and extra water
to pass into the tubule while keeping blood cells and protein
in the bloodstream.
How do glomerular
diseases interfere with kidney function?
Glomerular
diseases damage the glomeruli, letting protein and sometimes
red blood cells leak into the urine. Sometimes a glomerular
disease also interferes with the clearance of waste products
by the kidney, so they begin to build up in the blood.
Furthermore, loss of blood proteins like albumin in the urine
can result in a fall in their level in the bloodstream. In
normal blood, albumin acts like a sponge, drawing extra fluid
from the body into the bloodstream, where it remains until the
kidneys remove it. But when albumin leaks into the urine, the
blood loses its capacity to absorb extra fluid from the body.
Fluid can accumulate outside the circulatory system in the
face, hands, feet, or ankles and cause
swelling.
What are the
symptoms of glomerular disease?
The signs
and symptoms of glomerular disease include
- proteinuria: large amounts of protein
in the urine
- hematuria: blood in the
urine
- reduced glomerular filtration rate:
inefficient filtering of wastes from the
blood
- hypoproteinemia: low blood
protein
- edema: swelling in parts of the body
One or more
of these symptoms can be the first sign of kidney disease. But
how would you know, for example, whether you have proteinuria?
Before seeing a doctor, you may not. But some of these
symptoms have signs, or visible
manifestations:
- Proteinuria may cause foamy
urine.
- Blood
may cause the urine to be pink or
cola-colored.
- Edema
may be obvious in hands and ankles, especially at the end of
the day, or around the eyes when awakening in the morning,
for example.
How is glomerular
disease diagnosed?
Patients
with glomerular disease have significant amounts of protein in
the urine, which may be referred to as “nephrotic range” if
levels are very high. Red blood cells in the urine are a
frequent finding as well, particularly in some forms of
glomerular disease. Urinalysis provides information about
kidney damage by indicating levels of protein and red blood
cells in the urine. Blood tests measure the levels of waste
products such as creatinine and urea nitrogen to determine
whether the filtering capacity of the kidneys is impaired. If
these lab tests indicate kidney damage, the doctor may
recommend ultrasound or an x ray to see whether the shape or
size of the kidneys is abnormal. These tests are called renal
imaging. But since glomerular disease causes problems at the
cellular level, the doctor will probably also recommend a
kidney biopsy—a procedure in which a needle is used to extract
small pieces of tissue for examination with different types of
microscopes, each of which shows a different aspect of the
tissue. A biopsy may be helpful in confirming glomerular
disease and identifying the cause.
What causes
glomerular disease?
A number of
different diseases can result in glomerular disease. It may be
the direct result of an infection or a drug toxic to the
kidneys, or it may result from a disease that affects the
entire body, like diabetes or lupus. Many different kinds of
diseases can cause swelling or scarring of the nephron or
glomerulus. Sometimes glomerular disease is idiopathic,
meaning that it occurs without an apparent associated
disease.
The
categories presented below can overlap: that is, a disease
might belong to two or more of the categories. For example,
diabetic nephropathy is a form of glomerular disease that can
be placed in two categories: systemic diseases, since diabetes
itself is a systemic disease, and sclerotic diseases, because
the specific damage done to the kidneys is associated with
scarring.
Autoimmune
Diseases
When the
body’s immune system functions properly, it creates
protein-like substances called antibodies and immunoglobulins
to protect the body against invading organisms. In an
autoimmune disease, the immune system creates autoantibodies,
which are antibodies or immunoglobulins that attack the body
itself. Autoimmune diseases may be systemic and affect many
parts of the body, or they may affect only specific organs or
regions.
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)
affects many parts of the body: primarily the skin and joints,
but also the kidneys. Because women are more likely to develop
SLE than men, some researchers believe that a sex-linked
genetic factor may play a part in making a person susceptible,
although viral infection has also been implicated as a
triggering factor. Lupus nephritis is the name given to the
kidney disease caused by SLE, and it occurs when
autoantibodies form or are deposited in the glomeruli, causing
inflammation. Ultimately, the inflammation may create scars
that keep the kidneys from functioning properly. Conventional
treatment for lupus nephritis includes a combination of two
drugs, cyclophosphamide, a cytotoxic agent that suppresses the
immune system, and prednisolone, a corticosteroid used to
reduce inflammation. A newer immunosuppressant, mychophenolate
mofetil (MMF), has been used instead of cyclophosphamide.
Preliminary studies indicate that MMF may be as effective as
cyclophosphamide and has milder side
effects.
Goodpasture’s syndrome involves an
autoantibody that specifically targets the kidneys and the
lungs. Often, the first indication that patients have the
autoantibody is when they cough up blood. But lung damage in
Goodpasture’s syndrome is usually superficial compared with
progressive and permanent damage to the kidneys. Goodpasture’s
syndrome is a rare condition that affects mostly young men but
also occurs in women, children, and older adults. Treatments
include immunosuppressive drugs and a blood-cleaning therapy
called plasmapheresis that removes the
autoantibodies.
IgA nephropathy is a form of glomerular
disease that results when immunoglobulin A (IgA) forms
deposits in the glomeruli, where it creates inflammation. IgA
nephropathy was not recognized as a cause of glomerular
disease until the late 1960s, when sophisticated biopsy
techniques were developed that could identify IgA deposits in
kidney tissue.
The most
common symptom of IgA nephropathy is blood in the urine, but
it is often a silent disease that may go undetected for many
years. The silent nature of the disease makes it difficult to
determine how many people are in the early stages of IgA
nephropathy, when specific medical tests are the only way to
detect it. This disease is estimated to be the most common
cause of primary glomerulonephritis—that is, glomerular
disease not caused by a systemic disease like lupus or
diabetes mellitus. It appears to affect men more than women.
Although IgA nephropathy is found in all age groups, young
people rarely display signs of kidney failure because the
disease usually takes several years to progress to the stage
where it causes detectable complications.
No
treatment is recommended for early or mild cases of IgA
nephropathy when the patient has normal blood pressure and
less than 1 gram of protein in a 24-hour urine output. When
proteinuria exceeds 1 gram/day, treatment is aimed at
protecting kidney function by reducing proteinuria and
controlling blood pressure. Blood pressure
medicines—angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACE
inhibitors) or angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs)—that block
a hormone called angiotensin are most effective at achieving
those two goals simultaneously.
Hereditary
Nephritis—Alport Syndrome
The primary
indicator of Alport syndrome is a family history of chronic
glomerular disease, although it may also involve hearing or
vision impairment. This syndrome affects both men and women,
but men are more likely to experience chronic kidney disease
and sensory loss. Men with Alport syndrome usually first show
evidence of renal insufficiency while in their twenties and
reach total kidney failure by age 40. Women rarely have
significant renal impairment, and hearing loss may be so
slight that it can be detected only through testing with
special equipment. Usually men can pass the disease only to
their daughters. Women can transmit the disease to either
their sons or their daughters. Treatment focuses on
controlling blood pressure to maintain kidney
function.
Infection-related
Glomerular Disease
Glomerular
disease sometimes develops rapidly after an infection in other
parts of the body. Acute post-streptococcal glomerulonephritis
(PSGN) can occur after an episode of strep throat or, in rare
cases, impetigo (a skin infection). The Streptococcus
bacteria do not attack the kidney directly, but an infection
may stimulate the immune system to overproduce antibodies,
which are circulated in the blood and finally deposited in the
glomeruli, causing damage. PSGN can bring on sudden symptoms
of swelling (edema), reduced urine output (oliguria), and
blood in the urine (hematuria). Tests will show large amounts
of protein in the urine and elevated levels of creatinine and
urea nitrogen in the blood, thus indicating reduced kidney
function. High blood pressure frequently accompanies reduced
kidney function in this disease.
PSGN is
most common in children between the ages of 3 and 7, although
it can strike at any age, and it most often affects boys. It
lasts only a brief time and usually allows the kidneys to
recover. In a few cases, however, kidney damage may be
permanent, requiring dialysis or transplantation to replace
renal function.
Bacterial endocarditis, infection of the
tissues inside the heart, is also associated with subsequent
glomerular disease. Researchers are not sure whether the renal
lesions that form after a heart infection are caused entirely
by the immune response or whether some other disease mechanism
contributes to kidney damage. Treating the heart infection is
the most effective way of minimizing kidney damage.
Endocarditis sometimes produces chronic kidney disease
(CKD).
HIV, the virus that leads to AIDS, can
also cause glomerular disease. Between 5 and 10 percent of
people with HIV experience kidney failure, even before
developing full-blown AIDS. HIV-associated nephropathy usually
begins with heavy proteinuria and progresses rapidly (within a
year of detection) to total kidney failure. Researchers are
looking for therapies that can slow down or reverse this rapid
deterioration of renal function, but some possible solutions
involving immunosuppression are risky because of the patients’
already compromised immune
system.
Sclerotic
Diseases
Glomerulosclerosis is scarring
(sclerosis) of the glomeruli. In several sclerotic conditions,
a systemic disease like lupus or diabetes is responsible.
Glomerulosclerosis is caused by the activation of glomerular
cells to produce scar material. This may be stimulated by
molecules called growth factors, which may be made by
glomerular cells themselves or may be brought to the
glomerulus by the circulating blood that enters the glomerular
filter.
Diabetic nephropathy is the leading
cause of glomerular disease and of total kidney failure in the
United States. Kidney disease is one of several problems
caused by elevated levels of blood glucose, the central
feature of diabetes. In addition to scarring the kidney,
elevated glucose levels appear to increase the speed of blood
flow into the kidney, putting a strain on the filtering
glomeruli and raising blood
pressure.
Diabetic
nephropathy usually takes many years to develop. People with
diabetes can slow down damage to their kidneys by controlling
their blood glucose through healthy eating with moderate
protein intake, physical activity, and medications. People
with diabetes should also be careful to keep their blood
pressure at a level below 130/85 mm Hg, if possible. Blood
pressure medications called ACE inhibitors and ARBs are
particularly effective at minimizing kidney damage and are now
frequently prescribed to control blood pressure in patients
with diabetes and in patients with many forms of kidney
disease.
Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis
(FSGS) describes scarring in scattered regions of the kidney,
typically limited to one part of the glomerulus and to a
minority of glomeruli in the affected region. FSGS may result
from a systemic disorder or it may develop as an idiopathic
kidney disease, without a known cause. Proteinuria is the most
common symptom of FSGS, but, since proteinuria is associated
with several other kidney conditions, the doctor cannot
diagnose FSGS on the basis of proteinuria alone. Biopsy may
confirm the presence of glomerular scarring if the tissue is
taken from the affected section of the kidney. But finding the
affected section is a matter of chance, especially early in
the disease process, when lesions may be
scattered.
Confirming
a diagnosis of FSGS may require repeat kidney biopsies.
Arriving at a diagnosis of idiopathic FSGS requires the
identification of focal scarring and the elimination of
possible systemic causes such as diabetes or an immune
response to infection. Since idiopathic FSGS is, by
definition, of unknown cause, it is difficult to treat. No
universal remedy has been found, and most patients with FSGS
progress to total kidney failure over 5 to 20 years. Some
patients with an aggressive form of FSGS reach total kidney
failure in 2 to 3 years. Treatments involving steroids or
other immunosuppressive drugs appear to help some patients by
decreasing proteinuria and improving kidney function. But
these treatments are beneficial to only a minority of those in
whom they are tried, and some patients experience even poorer
kidney function as a result. ACE inhibitors and ARBs may also
be used in FSGS to decrease proteinuria. Treatment should
focus on controlling blood pressure and blood cholesterol
levels, factors that may contribute to kidney
scarring.
Other Glomerular
Diseases
Membranous nephropathy, also called
membranous glomerulopathy, is the second most common cause of
the nephrotic syndrome (proteinuria, edema, high cholesterol)
in U.S. adults after diabetic nephropathy. Diagnosis of
membranous nephropathy requires a kidney biopsy, which reveals
unusual deposits of immunoglobulin G and complement C3,
substances created by the body’s immune system. Fully 75
percent of cases are idiopathic, which means that the cause of
the disease is unknown. The remaining 25 percent of cases are
the result of other diseases like systemic lupus
erythematosus, hepatitis B or C infection, or some forms of
cancer. Drug therapies involving penicillamine, gold, or
captopril have also been associated with membranous
nephropathy. About 20 to 40 percent of patients with
membranous nephropathy progress, usually over decades, to
total kidney failure, but most patients experience either
complete remission or continued symptoms without progressive
kidney failure. Doctors disagree about how aggressively to
treat this condition, since about 20 percent of patients
recover without treatment. ACE inhibitors and ARBs are
generally used to reduce proteinuria. Additional medication to
control high blood pressure and edema is frequently required.
Some patients benefit from steroids, but this treatment does
not work for everyone. Additional immunosuppressive
medications are helpful for some patients with progressive
disease.
Minimal change disease (MCD) is the
diagnosis given when a patient has the nephrotic syndrome and
the kidney biopsy reveals little or no change to the structure
of glomeruli or surrounding tissues when examined by a light
microscope. Tiny drops of a fatty substance called a lipid may
be present, but no scarring has taken place within the kidney.
MCD may occur at any age, but it is most common in childhood.
A small percentage of patients with idiopathic nephrotic
syndrome do not respond to steroid therapy. For these
patients, the doctor may recommend a low-sodium diet and
prescribe a diuretic to control edema. The doctor may
recommend the use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs to
reduce proteinuria. ACE inhibitors and ARBs have also been
used to reduce proteinuria in patients with steroid-resistant
MCD. These patients may respond to larger doses of steroids,
more prolonged use of steroids, or steroids in combination
with immunosuppressant drugs, such as chlorambucil,
cyclophosphamide, or
cyclosporine.
What are renal
failure and end-stage renal disease?
Renal
failure is any acute or chronic loss of kidney function and is
the term used when some kidney function remains. Total kidney
failure, sometimes called end-stage renal disease (ESRD),
indicates permanent loss of kidney function. Depending on the
form of glomerular disease, renal function may be lost in a
matter of days or weeks or may deteriorate slowly and
gradually over the course of decades.
Acute Renal
Failure
A few forms
of glomerular disease cause very rapid deterioration of kidney
function. For example, PSGN can cause severe symptoms
(hematuria, proteinuria, edema) within 2 to 3 weeks after a
sore throat or skin infection develops. The patient may
temporarily require dialysis to replace renal function. This
rapid loss of kidney function is called acute renal failure
(ARF). Although ARF can be life-threatening while it lasts,
kidney function usually returns after the cause of the kidney
failure has been treated. In many patients, ARF is not
associated with any permanent damage. However, some patients
may recover from ARF and subsequently develop
CKD.
Chronic Kidney
Disease
Most forms
of glomerular disease develop gradually, often causing no
symptoms for many years. CKD is the slow, gradual loss of
kidney function. Some forms of CKD can be controlled or slowed
down. For example, diabetic nephropathy can be delayed by
tightly controlling blood glucose levels and using ACE
inhibitors and ARBs to reduce proteinuria and control blood
pressure. But CKD cannot be cured. Partial loss of renal
function means that some portion of the patient’s nephrons
have been scarred, and scarred nephrons cannot be repaired. In
many cases, CKD leads to total kidney
failure.
Total Kidney
Failure
To stay
alive, a patient with total kidney failure must go on
dialysis—hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis—or receive a new
kidney through transplantation. Patients with CKD who are
approaching total kidney failure should learn as much about
their treatment options as possible so they can make an
informed decision when the time comes. With the help of
dialysis or transplantation, many people continue to lead
full, productive lives after reaching total kidney
failure.
Points to
Remember
- The
kidneys filter waste and extra fluid from the
blood.
- The
filtering process takes place in the nephron, where
microscopic blood vessel filters, called glomeruli, are
attached to fluid-collecting tubules.
- A number
of different disease processes can damage the glomeruli and
thereby cause kidney failure. Glomerulonephritis and
glomerulosclerosis are broad terms that include many forms
of damage to the glomeruli.
- Some
forms of kidney failure can be slowed down, but scarred
glomeruli can never be repaired.
- Treatment for the early stages of kidney
failure depends on the disease causing the
damage.
- Early
signs of kidney failure include blood or protein in the
urine and swelling in the hands, feet, abdomen, or face.
Kidney failure may be silent for many years.
The Nephrotic
Syndrome
- The
nephrotic syndrome is a condition marked by very high levels
of protein in the urine; low levels of protein in the blood;
swelling, especially around the eyes, feet, and hands; and
high cholesterol.
- The
nephrotic syndrome is a set of symptoms, not a disease in
itself. It can occur with many diseases, so prevention
relies on controlling the diseases that cause
it.
- Treatment of the nephrotic syndrome focuses
on identifying and treating the underlying cause, if
possible, and reducing high cholesterol, blood pressure, and
protein in the urine through diet, medication, or
both.
- The
nephrotic syndrome may go away once the underlying cause, if
known, is treated. However, often a kidney disease is the
underlying cause and cannot be cured. In these cases, the
kidneys may gradually lose their ability to filter wastes
and excess water from the blood. If kidney failure occurs,
the patient will need to be on dialysis or have a kidney
transplant.
Definitions
Signs and Symptoms of
Glomerulonephritis
edema (eh-DEE-muh): Swelling caused by
the accumulation of fluid in cells and tissues. In kidney
failure, fluid may collect in the feet, hands, abdomen, or
face.
hematuria (HEE-muh-TOOR-ee-uh): Blood in
the urine. Blood may turn the urine pink or
cola-colored.
hypoproteinemia
(HY-po-PRO-teen-EE-mee-uh): Reduced levels of protein in the
blood.
proteinuria (PRO-tee-NOOR-ee-uh): Large
amounts of protein in the
urine.
uremia (yoo-REE-mee-uh): Accumulation of
urea and other wastes in the blood. These wastes, which become
toxic in large amounts, are normally eliminated through
urination.
Diseases and
Conditions
autoimmune (AW-toh-ih-MYOON) disease: A
disease in which the body’s own disease-fighting cells attack
the body itself.
hypertension (HY-per-TEN-shun): High
blood pressure, a condition that can cause kidney damage or be
caused by kidney disease.
idiopathic (id-ee-o-PATH-ik) disease: A
disease that occurs without a known
cause.
nephrotoxic (NEF-ro-TOKS-ik): Damaging
to the kidneys.
sclerotic (skleh-ROT-ik) disease: A
disease in which tissues become hardened or
scarred.
systemic (sis-TEM-ik) disease: A disease
that affects multiple parts of the body, often as a result of
substances circulating in the
blood.
Treatments and
Procedures
biopsy (BY-op-see): A procedure in which
a needle is used to obtain small pieces of tissue from an
organ for examination under different types of microscopes,
each of which shows a different aspect of the
tissue.
dialysis (dy-AL-ih-sis): A medical
treatment that removes wastes and extra fluid from the blood
after the kidneys have stopped
working.
immunosuppressant
(im-YOON-oh-suh-PRESS-unt): A medicine given to block the
body’s immune system.
plasmapheresis (PLAZ-muh-fer-EE-sis): A
medical treatment in which the blood is treated outside the
body to remove harmful antibodies, and then returned to the
patient.
Kidney Parts and Organic
Substances
antibody (AN-tee-BOD-ee): A molecule
that protects the body against disease by attacking foreign
tissues or organisms. Antibodies are also called
immunoglobulins.
antigen (AN-tih-jen): A substance that
triggers a response from the body’s immune
system.
autoantibody (AW-toh-AN-tee-bod-ee): An
antibody that attacks the body
itself.
creatinine (kree-AT-ih-nin): A waste
product in the blood that results from the normal breakdown of
muscle. Healthy kidneys filter creatinine from the
blood.
glomerulus (gloh-MEHR-yoo-lus): The tiny
cluster of looping blood vessels in the nephron, where wastes
are filtered from the blood.
lipid (LIP-id): One of several fatty
substances used in cells. Excess lipids in the blood may
result in harmful deposits in blood
vessels.
nephron (NEF-rahn): One of a million
tiny filtering units in each kidney. Each nephron is made up
of both a glomerulus and a fluid-collecting tubule that
processes extra water and
wastes.
protein (PRO-teen): A substance found in
food and used by the body to grow, repair tissue, and fight
disease.
urea (yoo-REE-uh): A waste material
found in blood after protein has been broken down. Healthy
kidneys remove urea from the blood. Damaged kidneys may allow
urea to accumulate in the blood, thus causing
uremia.
For More
Information
American
Association of Kidney Patients
3505 East Frontage
Road
Suite 315
Tampa, FL 33607
Phone: 1–800–749–2257
or 813–636–8100
Fax: 813–636–8122
Email:
info@aakp.org
Internet:
www.aakp.org
American
Kidney Fund
6110 Executive Boulevard
Suite
1010
Rockville, MD 20852
Phone: 1–800–638–8299 or
301–881–3052
Fax: 301–881–0898
Email: helpline@akfinc.org
Internet:
www.akfinc.org
Life
Options/Rehabilitation Resource Center
c/o Medical
Education Institute, Inc.
414 D'Onofrio Drive
Suite
200
Madison, WI 53719
Phone: 1–800–468–7777
Fax:
608–833–8366
Email: lifeoptions@MEIresearch.org
Internet:
www.lifeoptions.org
www.kidneyschool.org
National
Kidney Foundation
30 East 33rd Street
New York, NY
10016
Phone: 1–800–622–9010 or 212–889–2210
Fax:
212–689–9261
Email: info@kidney.org
Internet:
www.kidney.org