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HEMATURIA. Hematuria. Transient phenomenon of little significance. Sign of serious renal disease. Classification of hematuria. Macroscopic - Microscopic Symptomatic - Symptomless Transient - Persistent. Normal erythrocyte excretion rate
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Hematuria Transient phenomenon of little significance Sign of serious renal disease
Classification of hematuria • Macroscopic - Microscopic • Symptomatic - Symptomless • Transient - Persistent
Normal erythrocyte excretion rate * 0 – 425.000/12 h. ( mean – 65.750 ) T.Addis; J.of Clin Invest, 1926 • Upperlimit in children * 500.000 - 2.000.000/24h.
Detection & quantificationof hematuria • Screening test ( dipsticks) - 0.02-0.03 mg/dL of Hb, myoglobin - ~5-20 RBC/mm³ • Semiquantitative estimation - centrifugation of 10-15 ml of urine - resuspention of sediment in 1 ml of residual urine - high-power microscopy • Counting chamber - the number of cells in 1 microliter of unspun urine
Microscopic Hematuria • Definition> 3-5 RBC/HPF > 5 RBC/mm³ > 8000 RBC/ml
Causes of Hematuria • Kidney disease • Lesions along the urinary tract • Conditions unrelated to kidney andurinary tract
Hematuria not representing kidney or urinary tract disorder • Following exercise • Febrile disorders • Gastroenteritis with dehydration • Contamination from external genitalia
Renal causes of Hematuria • Glomerular - Acute Postinfectious Glomerulonephritis - IgA Nephropathy - Hereditary Nephritis ( Alport syndrome) - Benign Recurrent or Persistent Hematuria ( Thin Membrane Disease ) 1.Sporadic 2.Familial - Membranoproliferative Glomerulonephritis - Crescentic Glomerulonephritis - Lupus Nephritis - Nephritis of Henoch-Shönlein Purpura - Focal Glomerulosclerosis - Hemolityc-Uremic Syndrome
Acute nephritic syndrome • Hematuria • Proteinuria • Reduced renal function • Edema • Hypertension
Renal causes of Hematuria • Non-glomerular - Infection ( Pyelonephritis ) - Interstitial Nephritis - Metabolic ( Uric Acid, Nephrocalcinosis ) - Renal Malformation ( Cystic Kidney ) - Tumors ( Wilm’s, Acute Leukemia) - Idiopatic Hypercalciuria - Trauma
Causes of urinary tract related Hematuria • Infection • Urolithiasis • Obstruction ( UPJ Stenosis ) • Trauma • Drugs ( Cyclophosphamide ) • Tumors
Isolated Hematuria(microscopic) • No other urinary abnormalities • No renal insufficiency • No evidence for systemic disease Incidence ( school-aged children ) 4-6% - single urine examination 0.5-1% - repeated testing over 6-12 months
Etiologies of isolated Hematuria • Glomerular - Benign Recurrent or Persistent Hematuria 1.Sporadic 2.Familial - IgA Nephropathy - Alport syndrome - PSAGN • Non-glomerular - Idiopathic Hypercalciuria -Cystic Kidneys - Urinary Tract obstruction - Tumors - Trauma
Hematuria with familial association • Glomerular - Benign Familial Hematuria - Alport syndrome • Non-glomerular - Idiopathic Hypercalciuria -Polycystic Kidney Disease - Urolithiasis - Tumors
Idiopathic Hypercalciuria • Definition: Calcium excretion > 4 mg/kg/day Urinary Ca/Creatinine > 0.2 • Possible mechanism of hematuria: microcrystals damaging the tubular or mucosal epithelia. Resolution of hematuria with anticalciuric therapy
Alport syndrome- hereditary disorder of GBM • X-linked dominant • Autosomal recessive • Autosomal dominant
Renal disease • Macro /Microhematuria • Proteinuria • Nephrotic syndrome • Hypertension • Renal failure- males • Progressive or juvenile – 20 y • Nonprogressive – 40 y
Hearing defects • Sensorineural bilateral • Never congenital • Boys- 85% . Girls – 18% < 15y • Progression of hearing loss parallels renal impairment
Diagnosis of Alport syndrome • Hematuria with or without proteinuria • Hypertension • Renal failure • Ocular defects – anterior lenticonus • Familial hematuria • Sensorineural hearing loss • Progression to renal failure occurring in at least one affected subject
Familial benign essential hematuria • Familial hematuria without proteinuria and without progression to renal failure or hearing defect • Diffuse attenuation of the GBM is usually considered the hallmark of the condition • It’s non pathognomonic of FBEH
Continue • Autosomal dominant trait • Normal antigenicity of the GBM
Thin basement membrane nephropathy • Hematuria • Proteinuria • Attenuation of the GBM • In children may be Alport • In adults m/p benign disorder
HEREDITARY NEPHROPATHY Alport Syndrome Benign Familial Hematuria Overlap of histological findings The prognosis appears to be depend more on the degree of clinical expression in other members of the family and less on the histological findings
Evaluation of HematuriaHistory • Detailed review of family history hematuria proteinuria renal insufficiency deafness stones • Precipitating factors infection exercise • Abdominal pain HSP hydronephrosis pyelonephritis urolithiasis
Evaluation of HematuriaPhysical Examination • Growth failure • Hypertension • Pallor • Edema • Rash • Abdomen: search for a mass or tenderness • External genitalia: bleeding infection trauma
Work-up of a child with Hematuria • Phase I:Urinalysis ( sediment examination ) RBC’s morphology Urine culture BUN, Creatinine, Proteins, Electrolytes Antibodies against strept. & other antigens Complement, ANF, Immunoglobulins Renal US Urinalysis of 1st degree relatives 24h urine collection: Ca, Creat.,Protein, UA • Phase II: Hearing test Cystoscopy Renal biopsy
Isolated hematuria • The child needs to be monitored for the appearance of new clinical signs: hypertension proteinuria changes in the pattern or severity of hematuria • If there is no change in the first year,observation at yearlyintervals is adequate
Isolated hematuriaPossible outcome • Disappearance of hematuria • Hematuria will persist - follow-up should be continued • The hematuria will no longer be “isolated” - further investigation
Hematuria Transient phenomenon of little significance Sign of serious renal disease