Course Content
Zambian Paediatric & Obstetrics-Gynecology (OB/GYN) Clinical Mastery

Paediatric Nephrotic Syndrome 

Lesson Objectives

By the end of this lesson, learners should be able to:

  1. Define nephrotic syndrome and describe its diagnostic criteria.

  2. Identify primary and secondary causes of nephrotic syndrome in children.

  3. Recognize clinical features, including oedema, hypertension, and hematuria.

  4. Interpret laboratory investigations including urine protein, serum albumin, lipids, and immunologic markers.

  5. Outline supportive care, pharmacologic therapy, and steroid protocols.

  6. Define remission, relapse, frequent relapse, steroid dependence, and steroid resistance.

  7. Identify complications and preventive measures.

Description

Nephrotic syndrome is characterized by heavy proteinuria (>40 mg/m²/hr or 3+ on dipstick), hypoalbuminaemia (serum albumin <25 g/L), hyperlipidaemia, and oedema.

Common causes:

  • Primary/idiopathic nephrotic syndrome

  • Secondary nephrotic syndrome due to infections (Hepatitis B, malaria, syphilis), systemic disease (SLE)

  • Congenital nephrotic syndrome (<3 months of age)

Clinical Features

  • Oedema (periorbital, peripheral) with or without ascites

  • Pleural effusions and generalized oedema (anasarca)

  • Hypertension and haematuria may be present

  • Weight gain due to fluid retention

Investigations

Category Tests / Findings
Blood FBC/ESR, U&E, creatinine, LFTs including serum albumin, C3/C4, ANA, ASOT, anti-DNase B, RPR, HCV antibodies, HBsAg, triglycerides, cholesterol
Urine Dipstick urinalysis, morning urine protein/creatinine ratio ≥0.2 g/mmol
Infectious / Immunologic VZV IgG, Tuberculin skin test
Imaging CXR, KUB ultrasound
Renal biopsy Only if atypical: macroscopic hematuria, age <12 months or >12 years, low C3, vasculitic rash, suspected vasculitis

Treatment

Supportive Care:

  • No added salt in diet

  • Diuretics: Furosemide 1 mg/kg twice daily; monitor intravascular volume

  • Severe oedema: 20% albumin 1 g/kg over 4–6 hours, with monitoring for pulmonary oedema and hypertension

  • Prophylactic antibiotics (penicillin; erythromycin if allergic) for gross oedema or ascites

  • Daily weight and urinalysis monitoring

Pharmacologic Therapy:

  • Prednisolone:

    • Induction: 60 mg/m²/day (≈2 mg/kg) for 4 weeks

    • Alternate-day therapy: 40 mg/m² (≈1.5 mg/kg) for 4 weeks

    • Gradual taper over 4–6 weeks thereafter

  • Antihypertensives: calcium channel blockers (amlodipine, nifedipine) preferred initially; ensure normal creatinine and potassium before ACE inhibitors

Definitions

Term Definition
Remission Urine albumin nil/trace (<40 mg/m²/hr) for 3 consecutive days
Relapse Urine albumin 2+ or more for 3 consecutive days after prior remission
Frequent relapse ≥2 relapses in 6 months or >4 relapses in 12 months
Steroid dependence Relapse while on steroids or within 14 days of discontinuation
Steroid resistance No remission after ≥28 days of prednisolone at 2 mg/kg/day

Complications

  • Increased susceptibility to bacterial infections

  • Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis

  • Hypovolaemia and thromboembolism

  • Chronic steroid-related: hypertension, obesity, growth retardation

Key Summary

  • Nephrotic syndrome = proteinuria + hypoalbuminaemia + oedema + hyperlipidaemia

  • Causes: primary, secondary, congenital

  • Supportive care: diet, diuretics, albumin, antibiotics

  • Prednisolone is mainstay of therapy

  • Monitor for remission, relapse, steroid dependence/resistance

  • Watch for infections, thromboembolism, and steroid complications

 

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