Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE)
This disease chiefly affects young females and is diagnosed by serological evidence of autoantibodies to cell nuclear components (ANA’s) and by clinical evidence of inflammatory processes in multiple organs (skin, joints, brain, and kidneys). Five major categories of glomerular histopathology have been described for SLE nephritis . Virtually all cases of lupus nephritis display a degree of interstitial inflammation uncommon for other glomerulopathies. One subset of patients with SLE renal disease has a dominant interstitial lesion with little or no glomerular involvement.
In general, the clinical presentation and severity of renal disease in SLE correlate to the underlying histological lesion. About two thirds of patients will have some clinical evidence of renal disease (proteinuria, microhematuria, or azotemia) at the time SLE is diagnosed. Virtually all patients will have some evidence of SLE renal disease if studied with renal biopsy.
Renal disease in SLE may present clinically as either nephrosis or nephritis. The former presentation is more common, with the nephrotic syndrome occuring in over half of all patients. Even in these patients, however, considerable overlap of clinical manifestations occurs, and hematuria, hypertension, and azotemia are frequent findings. A smaller number of patients present with a fullblown nephritic picture with a clinical course resembling that of RPGN. Renal function may deteriorate rapidly over a period of only a few weeks. Serum complement activity, both CH50 and C3, are reduced with active renal disease. The serum C4 may be strikingly depressed, indicating activation of the classic complement pathway.
As shown in Table 34-9, the glomerular his-topathology in SLE is similar to that seen in non-SLE diseases for any given lesion. For instance, Type IV, diffuse proliferative lupus glomerulonephritis, has similarities to postinfectious AGN. Likewise, Type V, membranous lupus glomerulopathy, is indistinguishable from idiopathic membranous nephropathy. It is believed that the pattern of glomerular injury relates to the presence or absence of circulating immune complexes; the ability of free antigens to fix to, or lodge in, glomerular structures; and the intensity and pattern of the immune response.
The clinical course and prognosis of lupus nephritis correspond to the glomerular lesion. As seen from , the five-year renal survival in untreated patients ranges from more than 80 per cent in patients with Type V, membranous lesion to about 25 per cent in patients with the Type IV, diffuse proliferative lesion. Progression of the renal lesion, for example, from Type III, focal proliferative, to Type IV, diffuse proliferative, has been documented. Regression of lesions to a less ominous pathological picture is also known to occur, especially after vigorous therapy. The indications for renal biopsy either to determine the renal prognosis or to define the need for treatment with steroids or immunosuppressive drugs remain unclear.
Corticosteroid therapy is the mainstay of treatment for lupus nephritis. In the absence of advanced renal failure (serum creatinine >6 mg/dl) and extensive glomerular sclerosis, high-dose steroid therapy (prednisone, 40 to 60 mg/day for 6 to 12 months] has had a dramatic effect on survival. The renal survival in diffuse proliferative SLE glomerulopathy with such treatment is up to 80 per cent in five years versus the 25 per cent survival without steroids. There is some evidence to support treatment of Types II and III lupus nephritis with low doses (<40 mg prednisone/day) of steroids in an attempt to normalize serum CH50 activity and to prevent progression to Type IV, diffuse proliferative, nephritis. The addition of a cytotoxic drug, such as azathioprine, may allow use of lower doses of prednisone, avoiding complications of high-dose steroid therapy but adding those of a cytotoxic agent. The membranous lesion has been successfully treated with steroids to reduce proteinuria, but an effective treatment to halt the slow progression to renal failure has not been demonstrated.
- Renal Biopsy
- TREATMENT AND PROGNOSIS
- Regulation of Fluids and Electrolytes
- MANAGEMENT OF CARDIAC ARRHYTHMIAS
- Management
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- PRE-EXCITATIOIi SYNDROMES
- THE AIRWAY STRUCTURE
- VARIATiT ANGINA
- THE SLEEP APNEA SYNDROME
- Etiology and Pathogenesis
- Genitourinary System
- LABORATORY TESTS IN LIVER DISEASE
- ENVIRONMENTAL DAMAGE OF THE EXTREMITIES
- NONPHARMACOLOGICAL THERAPY OF TACHYARRHYTHMIAS
- APPROACH TO THE PATIENT WJTH SUSPECTED MALDIGESTION AND/OR MALABSORPTION
- Indirect
- Factors Involved in the Choice of Type of Dialysis
- PATHOGENESIS OF RESPIRATORY TRACT INFECTION
- CARCINOMA OF THE COLON
- Amyloidosis
- MULTIVALVULAR DISEASE
- SPECIFIC MANIFESTATIONS OF RENAL DISEASE
- SMOKE INHALATION
- RENAL PHARMACOLOGY
- Mechanism of Proteinuria
- CLINICAL SYMPTOMS OF ESOPHAGEAL DISEASE
- POSTCAPILLARY PULMONARY HYPERTENSION
- ATHEROSCLEROSIS
- CLINICAL CLASSIFICATION OF JAUNDICE
- POLYPS OF THE GASTROINTESTINAL TRACT
- LABORATORY TESTS TOR BILIRUBIN
- Procainamide
- BRORICHODILATORS
- Improving Case Management