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Nephritis

Nephritis
Classification and external resources
MeSH D009393

Nephritis is inflammation of the nephrons in the kidneys. The word "nephritis" was imported from Latin, which took it from Greek: νεφρίτιδα.[1] The word comes from the Greek νεφρός - nephro- meaning "of the kidney" and -itis meaning "inflammation". Nephritis is often caused by infections, toxins, and auto-immune diseases.

Subtypes

Nephritis is the most common producer of glomerular injury. It is a disturbance of the glomerular structure with inflammatory cell proliferation. This can lead to reduced glomerular blood flow, leading to reduced urine output (oliguria) and retention of waste products (uremia). As a result, red blood cells may leak out of damaged glomeruli, causing blood to appear in the urine (hematuria). Low renal blood flow activates the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS), causing fluid retention and mild hypertension.

Nephritis refers to inflammation of one or both kidneys. It can be caused by infection, but is most commonly caused by autoimmune disorders that affect the major organs. For example, those with lupus are at a much higher risk for developing nephritis. In rare cases nephritis can be genetically inherited, though it may not present in childhood.

Nephritis is a serious medical condition which is the ninth highest cause of human death. As the kidneys inflame, they begin to excrete needed protein from the body into the urine stream. This condition is called proteinuria. Loss of necessary protein due to nephritis can result in several life-threatening symptoms. Most dangerous in cases of nephritis is the loss of protein that keeps blood from clotting. This can result in blood clots causing sudden stroke.

Epidemiology

Disability-adjusted life year for nephritis and nephrosis per 100,000 inhabitants in 2004.[2]

  no data

  less than 40

  40-120

  120-200

  200-280

  280-360

  360-440

  440-520

  520-600

  600-680

  680-760

  760-840

  more than 840

See also

References

v · d · eUrinary system · Pathology · Urologic disease / Uropathy (N00–N39, 580–599)
Abdominal

Nephropathy/
(nephritis+
nephrosis)

Glomerulopathy/
glomerulitis/
(glomerulonephritis+
glomerulonephrosis)

Primarily
nephrotic

.3 Mesangial proliferative · .4 Endocapillary proliferative .5/.6 Membranoproliferative/mesangiocapillary

By condition

Primarily
nephritic,
.7 RPG

Type III RPG/Pauci-immune

Tubulopathy/
tubulitis

RTA (RTA 2) · Fanconi syndrome

Any/all

Any/all

General syndromes

Renal failure (Acute renal failure, Chronic renal failure) · Uremic pericarditis · Uremia

Other

Ureter

Pelvic

Urethra

Any/all

M: URI

anat/phys/devp/cell

noco/acba/cong/tumr, sysi/epon, urte

proc/itvp, drug (G4B), blte, urte

v · d · eInflammation
Acute

preformed: Lysosome granules · vasoactive amines (Histamine, Serotonin)
synthesized on demand: cytokines (IFN-γ, IL-8, TNF-α, IL-1· eicosanoids (Leukotriene B4, Prostaglandins· Nitric oxide · Kinins

Chronic
Processes

Traditional: Rubor · Calor · Tumor · Dolor (pain) · Functio laesa
Modern: Acute-phase reaction/Fever · Vasodilation · Increased vascular permeability · Exudate · Leukocyte extravasation · Chemotaxis

Specific locations

Cardiovascular

Digestive

Dermatitis (Folliculitis· Cellulitis · Hidradenitis

Insulitis · Hypophysitis · Thyroiditis · Parathyroiditis · Adrenalitis