One of the most important functions of the kidney is to filter waste out of your blood using a million tiny filters called glomeruli. A glomerulus works a little bit like a kitchen colander, allowing waste and water to pass through to create urine.
Usually, blood will not pass through the “holes" in the colander, and instead return to your body. But if you have a kidney disease that damages your glomeruli, which we call glomerular disease, glomerular disease, blood will pass through the holes and enter your urine.
Glomerular diseases can vary from mild to very serious and include some diseases that rapidly lead to loss of kidney function.
Glomerular disease is a common cause of chronic kidney disease. Among patients on dialysis, about 15 percent have a diagnosis of glomerulonephritis, and another 30 to 50 percent have other glomerular diseases, such as diabetic nephropathy or high blood pressure.
Glomerular disease can be caused by:
Sometimes glomerular disease has no identifiable cause. When this happens, it is called idiopathic.
Autoimmune disease occurs when the body's immune system creates antibodies that attack the body. Autoimmune disorders that affect the kidneys include:
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Lupus is a very complicated disease that affects women more than men, and often affects women of color. Lupus can affect many different organs in your body, including the kidneys, and the kidney problems can vary from mild to severe. In severe cases lupus causes antibodies to attack the kidney, leading to a glomerular disease with scarring and loss of kidney function with eventual need for dialysis or transplantation. Lupus can also cause antibodies to attack the body's clotting system, leading to microscopic clots that plug the kidney's filters (the glomeruli). Treatment to prevent loss of kidney function includes medications that suppress the immune system and reduce inflammation. New medications are being developed every year in an effort to help people affected by Lupus. In addition, because Lupus can affect people and their kidneys in so many different ways, the treatment is often adjusted to meet a patient's unique characteristics.
IgA nephropathy. After diabetes, IgA nephropathy is the most common glomerular disease around the world and affects people of Asian descent more often. IgA can vary from mild disease with tiny amounts of blood in the urine lifelong, to moderate disease with both blood and protein in the urine, to severe disease in which there is also loss of kidney function with eventual need for dialysis or transplantation. In rare cases, there may also be a rash, but most often IgA has no other symptoms and requires a urine test to diagnose. Doctors don't fully understand this disease yet. Your body makes several different types of antibodies (mostly IgG, but some IgM, IgA, IgD) and in some people the IgA antibodies appear a bit different, which tricks the body into attacking these IgA antibodies while they are inside the kidney's filters. Treatment of IgA nephropathy depends on disease severity: mild and some moderate disease is treated with particular blood pressure medications, while the treatment of moderate to severe disease often includes medications that suppress the immune system.
Renal vasculitis, including ANCA vasculitis, Goodpasture's disease, and membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis. This is a group of several rare diseases that share common features in which antibodies attack the kidneys, usually causing severe glomerular disease.
The antibodies that are attacking the kidneys may also attack the sinuses, the lungs, the joints, or the skin, so the symptoms in an affected person could be a lingering sinus or respiratory infection, or a rash. In other cases, the only symptoms might be fatigue or just feeling generally ill. In all cases that affect the kidneys, there are blood cells and blood proteins in the urine. Treatment includes medicine to suppress the immune system to stop the antibodies from attacking your kidneys and other organs. In some cases these diseases can result in complete kidney failure and a need for dialysis within weeks, so prompt diagnosis and aggressive treatment is needed to save as much of the kidney as possible.
Infections in other areas of the body can lead to inflammation and perhaps even scarring in the kidneys. Infections that can lead to inflammation in the kidney include:
Post-infectious glomerulonephritis, in which antibodies fighting an infection also attack the kidneys. This usually occurs two to three weeks after the infection has resolved, usually in people who had strep throat, or sometimes a skin infection like impetigo, and in either case happens only to a minority of people who have these infections. Typical symptoms are dark urine with high amounts of blood cells and blood proteins in the urine, severe high blood pressure, and acute kidney injury. Children often appear very sick when they are diagnosed but usually heal very well. Adults often appear less sick than children but do not heal as well, and up to 50% will end up losing their kidney function over time, leading to a need for dialysis or transplantation.
Infectious glomerulonephritis. Similar to post-infectious glomerulonephritis, patients with this condition are fighting an infection, and their antibodies attack the kidneys. When the damage to the kidneys occurs while the infection is ongoing, we call this infectious glomerulonephritis. These patients are treated with powerful antibiotics to help them overcome the infection. Only once the infection is treated can their kidneys begin to heal. The most common cause is a bacterial infection of heart valves known as ineffective endocarditis. This condition is also found in patients who experience chronic infections of joint replacements and ventriculo-peritoneal shunts.
Viral infections, such as:
Diabetic kidney disease, or diabetic nephropathy, is the most common glomerular disease and is the most common cause of needing dialysis or kidney transplantation. High blood glucose from diabetes increases the speed of blood flow through the glomeruli, which makes the kidney filters work harder than they should, and leads to loss of excessive albumin and other blood proteins in the urine. Over time, the kidneys become scarred and loose function.
The best way to treat diabetic kidney disease is with early diagnosis and aggressive management. If not treated soon enough, it can lead the kidneys to fail a little bit more each year, leading to a need for dialysis or kidney transplantation.
Treatment for diabetic kidney disease is complex and includes:
This disease most often affects people with a family history of chronic kidney disease but can also affect patients with no family history.
There are three genes that can cause Alport's syndrome. Each of these genes creates a protein that helps form the kidney filter. The most commonly affected gene causes more severe symptoms in men than women. If the other two genes cause the condition, men and women are affected equally.
Medical treatment focuses on controlling blood pressure, but new treatments are being investigated. This severe illness frequently leads to a need for dialysis and transplantation.
A person affected by Alport's syndrome might pass the affected gene to their children, but this depends on which of the three genes is involved, the sex of the parent, and the sex of the child.
Nephrotic syndrome differs from most other glomerular diseases in that the kidneys may not be inflamed at all, but there is still a lot of protein entering the urine.
In nephrotic syndrome, the amount of protein in the urine can be very high. Your liver will struggle to create new proteins quickly enough, and protein levels in your blood will fall. Low levels of protein in the blood are accompanied by several symptoms and complications that can be severe including:
Membranous nephropathy is either a primary disorder of the kidney (most often caused by an autoimmune disorders) or is connected to some other cause, such as medication, viral hepatitis, or adenocarcinoma. The first step after diagnosis is to determine the cause of your condition and to treat that cause.
If you have primary membranous nephropathy, your doctor may treat you with:
Minimal change disease (MCD) is diagnosed using high resolution microscopy. Using conventional microscopy, the kidney looks almost normal, hence the name “minimal change."
Despite the name, patients with minimal change disease typically experience severe symptoms of nephrotic syndrome, including severe swelling of the legs and other body parts. Sometimes minimal change disease is caused by a medication (such as a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory like ibuprofen, or lithium) or a lymphoma, but most of the time the cause is uncertain. , . Minimal change disease is the most common cause of nephrotic syndrome in children. Both children and adults with minimal change disease are initially treated with steroids.
In the United States, FSGS is now the most common cause of nephrotic syndrome in adults. There are more possible causes of FSGS than any other nephrotic syndrome.
Determining the cause is an important step in the treatment process. Causes of FSGS include:
Treatments for FSGS include:
The most serious risk of glomerular disease is chronic kidney disease. Some glomerular diseases cause a slowly progressive chronic kidney disease, and it might take 15 to 20 years to lose all kidney function. Other glomerular diseases cause a loss of kidney function in weeks to months. The sooner your kidney disease is diagnosed and treated, the higher your chances of slowing the progression of your illness and avoiding dialysis or kidney transplant.
Glomerular disease often has few symptoms, but you may notice:
To diagnose glomerular disease, your doctor will likely run:
Early and precise diagnosis of glomerular disease is vital. Timely treatment is key to avoid kidney failure.
Treatment may include:
It isn't always possible to prevent glomerular disease.
But you can reduce your risk by following doctors' orders:
At the UPMC Kidney Disease Center, we will work with you to identify a reversible cause for your glomerular disease. Our nephrologists treat conditions across the entire spectrum of kidney disease and provide comprehensive care by partnering with other services at UPMC.
No matter the cause of your glomerular disease, you have hope at the UPMC Kidney Disease Center. Our nephrologists treat conditions across the entire spectrum of kidney disease.
The UPMC Glomerular Disease Clinic is the only specialty clinic for glomerular disease in Western Pennsylvania. Our experts are leading with cutting-edge research, diagnosis, and treatment for glomerular disease.
To learn more about kidney disease: