Bone Wizardry — Renal

Nephrotic vs Nephritic

Leaky Sieve vs Angry Filter — the two ways a glomerulus fails

Before we start…

A 6-year-old has a puffy face, 4+ protein on dipstick, cholesterol 350. No blood in the urine.

Nephrotic or Nephritic?

Nice. Massive proteinuria + hyperlipidemia + edema and NO hematuria = textbook nephrotic. This kid most likely has Minimal Change Disease — the #1 nephrotic syndrome in children. Let's break down why.
Not quite — but that's exactly why this page exists. Nephritic is the angry, bloody one (hematuria, RBC casts). This kid has massive protein loss and high cholesterol with no blood — that's nephrotic. Keep reading and you'll never mix these up again.
🔍 The Core Distinction

The glomerulus is a filter. It can fail in exactly two ways:

💧
NEPHROTIC = the filter has holes too big. Protein pours out (>3.5 g/day). Think: "leaky sieve." 🔑 Nephrotic = Protein = Poor albumin = Puffy. All P's.
🩸
NEPHRITIC = the filter is inflamed. Blood cells squeeze through (hematuria, RBC casts). Think: "angry filter." 🔑 NephrITIC = Inflamed = Influx of blood. The I's have it.

That's the whole thing. Protein leaking vs blood breaking through. Everything else is downstream of this one distinction.

Board Trap: Some diseases can present with features of BOTH (e.g., membranoproliferative GN, SLE class IV). But boards almost always ask about the classic presentations. Learn the pure forms first, then the overlaps.
↔️ Side-by-Side

💧 Nephrotic — "Leaky Sieve"

Proteinuria>3.5 g/day (massive)
HematuriaAbsent or minimal
AlbuminLow (hypoalbuminemia)
LipidsHigh (hyperlipidemia)
EdemaPeriorbital, dependent
BPUsually normal
Urine sedimentOval fat bodies, Maltese crosses
ComplementUsually normal
RBC castsNO

🩸 Nephritic — "Angry Filter"

Proteinuria<3.5 g/day (mild-mod)
HematuriaYES + RBC casts
AlbuminMildly decreased
LipidsUsually normal
EdemaMild (periorbital)
BPHypertension
Urine sedimentDysmorphic RBCs, RBC casts
ComplementOften low (C3)
OliguriaYES

Why edema in nephrotic? Lost albumin = low oncotic pressure = fluid leaks into tissues. Why hypertension in nephritic? Inflammation = salt/water retention + reduced GFR.

💧 The Big 5 Nephrotic Diseases

These are the heavy hitters. Boards love all five.

Minimal Change Disease
Kids #1

Who: Children (2-6 yo). Also: NSAIDsNSAIDs reduce prostaglandin-mediated blood flow to the glomerulus. The resulting ischemia can trigger podocyte injury → minimal change pattern., Hodgkin lymphomaHodgkin releases cytokines (IL-13) that damage podocyte foot processes. If an adult presents with MCD, screen for lymphoma..

Biopsy: Light microscopy is normal (that's the "minimal change"). EM shows foot process effacement — the podocytes flatten out.

Treatment: Steroids — responds dramatically. If it doesn't, rethink the diagnosis.

Board clue: Kid + nephrotic + responds to steroids = MCD until proven otherwise.

Focal Segmental Glomerulosclerosis
Adults #1 (AA)

Who: African Americans (#1 cause of nephrotic in AA), HIV, heroin use, obesity, sickle cell.

Biopsy: Focal (some glomeruli) + segmental (part of a glomerulus) sclerosis on LM. EM shows foot process effacement (like MCD but with sclerosis).

Why boards test it: It's the most common primary nephrotic syndrome in African American adults. HIV-associated nephropathy = FSGS.

Response to steroids: Poor (unlike MCD). This is a key differentiator.

Membranous Nephropathy
Adults #1 (overall)

Who: #1 nephrotic in adults overall. Associations: HBVHepatitis B antigens deposit in the subepithelial space, forming immune complexes that thicken the basement membrane., SLE (class V), solid tumors, anti-PLA2R antibodiesPhospholipase A2 receptor antibodies — present in ~70% of primary membranous. The target antigen sits on podocytes. This is the diagnostic serologic marker..

Biopsy: "Spike and dome" pattern on silver stain. Subepithelial deposits (between podocyte and GBM). Diffuse thickening of GBM.

Board clue: Adult + nephrotic + subepithelial deposits = membranous. If they mention anti-PLA2R, it's basically free points.

Board Trap: Membranous has a high risk of renal vein thrombosis. If a nephrotic patient gets sudden flank pain + worsening proteinuria, think thrombosis.
Diabetic Nephropathy
#1 Overall (US)

Who: Long-standing diabetes (type 1 or 2). Most common cause of nephrotic syndrome AND ESRD in the US.

Biopsy: Kimmelstiel-Wilson nodulesNodular glomerulosclerosis — round, acellular, eosinophilic nodules in the mesangium. Pathognomonic for diabetic nephropathy. Named after the two pathologists who described them in 1936. (nodular glomerulosclerosis). Diffuse GBM thickening + mesangial expansion.

Progression: Microalbuminuria → overt proteinuria → nephrotic syndrome → ESRD. ACE inhibitors slow progression (reduce intraglomerular pressure).

Board clue: Diabetic for 15+ years + proteinuria = diabetic nephropathy. Don't overthink it.

Amyloidosis
Congo Red

What: Misfolded proteins (amyloid) deposit in the kidney (and other organs). AL (primary, from plasma cells) or AA (secondary, from chronic inflammation like RA).

Biopsy: Congo red stainapple-green birefringence under polarized light. That's the pathognomonic finding.

Board clue: Nephrotic syndrome + multiple organ involvement (big tongue, carpal tunnel, heart failure) + Congo red positive = amyloidosis.

🩸 The Big Nephritic Diseases

These are the angry, bloody ones. The filter is inflamed.

IgA Nephropathy (Berger)
#1 GN worldwide

Key fact: Most common glomerulonephritisGlomerulonephritis = inflammation of the glomeruli. All nephritic diseases are forms of GN. The "-itis" suffix = inflammation = blood getting through. worldwide. Usually young adults.

Presentation: Gross hematuria DURING or within days of a URI (synpharyngitic — happens simultaneously, NOT weeks later).

Biopsy: Mesangial IgA depositsIgA is the mucosal antibody (gut, respiratory). During infection, IgA production surges. Abnormal IgA1 isn't cleared → deposits in the mesangium → inflammation → hematuria. on immunofluorescence.

Complement: Normal (not consumed in this process).

HSP connection: Henoch-Schonlein PurpuraHSP is the systemic form of IgA nephropathy. Same IgA deposits, but also in skin vessels (purpura), joints, GI tract. Think: IgA nephropathy is Berger disease (kidney only), HSP is Berger disease + everything else. = systemic IgA vasculitis. Same kidney findings, but add purpura + arthritis + abdominal pain.

Post-Streptococcal GN
2-4 weeks AFTER

Who: Kids (6-10 yo), 2-4 weeks AFTER Group A Strep pharyngitis or skin infection.

Key timing: AFTER, not during. This is the #1 differentiator from IgA (which is during/synpharyngitic).

Biopsy: "Lumpy bumpy" subepithelial depositsImmune complexes (antibody-antigen from the strep infection) deposit on the outer surface of the GBM. They're irregular = lumpy bumpy on immunofluorescence. Granular pattern. on IF. Enlarged, hypercellular glomeruli on LM.

Labs: Low C3 (complement consumed), elevated ASO/anti-DNase BASO (anti-streptolysin O) rises after pharyngitis. Anti-DNase B rises after skin infections. These confirm prior strep infection, not active infection..

Prognosis: Kids almost always recover fully. Adults have worse outcomes.

Rapidly Progressive GN
Crescents!

What: Rapid loss of kidney function (days to weeks). The most aggressive form of GN.

Biopsy: Crescents on light microscopy — proliferating parietal cells and macrophages in Bowman's space.

Three types:

  • Type I — Anti-GBM (GoodpastureAnti-GBM antibodies attack type IV collagen in the glomerular AND alveolar basement membranes. Kidney + lungs. Linear IF pattern. Young men who smoke are classic.): Linear IF pattern. Lungs + kidneys.
  • Type II — Immune complex: Granular IF pattern. Caused by SLE, IgA, post-strep going bad.
  • Type III — Pauci-immune (ANCA-associatedPauci-immune = few/no immune deposits on IF. The damage is from neutrophils activated by ANCA antibodies (c-ANCA in GPA, p-ANCA in MPA/EGPA). "Pauci" = the IF is deceptively quiet while the kidney is being destroyed.): Negative/few deposits on IF. GPA (c-ANCA), MPA (p-ANCA).

Board clue: Rapidly worsening renal function + crescents on biopsy = RPGN. Then use IF pattern to identify the type.

Alport Syndrome
Type IV Collagen

What: Defective type IV collagenType IV collagen is the structural protein of ALL basement membranes — kidney, eye, ear. That's why Alport hits all three. The mutation makes the GBM progressively thin → split → fail. — the stuff basement membranes are made of.

Inheritance: Most commonly X-linked (boys hit harder, carrier moms may have mild hematuria).

Triad: Nephritis + sensorineural hearing loss + eye abnormalities (anterior lenticonus).

EM: "Basket-weave" splitting of the GBM.

Board clue: Young male + hematuria + hearing loss = Alport. Don't overthink it.

IgA vs Post-Strep — The Timing Trap: Both present with hematuria after a respiratory infection. The difference is WHEN. IgA = DURING the URI (synpharyngitic). Post-Strep = 2-4 weeks AFTER. Boards test this constantly.
🌳 Decision Tree — Work the Case

A patient shows up with edema. Let's figure out what they have. You answer, THEN the tree reveals.

Patient presents with periorbital edema and foamy urine.
First question: What do you check — urine protein or urine blood?
Both, obviously. But the foamy urine is your clue — foam = protein (like shaking egg whites). Protein first. If it's >3.5 g/day, you're in nephrotic territory.
Good instinct, but the foamy urine is screaming at you — foam = protein (think shaking egg whites). Check protein first. If it's massive (>3.5 g/day), you're in nephrotic land.
🎯 Elimination Game

Four diseases. Clinical clues eliminate one at a time. Can you find the last one standing?

🧩 Sort It Out

Drag each feature to where it belongs: NEPHROTIC, NEPHRITIC, or BOTH.

Nephrotic
Nephritic
Both
🧪 Clinical Vignettes

5 patients just walked in with kidney problems. Figure out what's going on before their creatinine gets any higher.