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Description
Nephrotic syndrome (nephrosis) is a symptom complex seen in patients with various forms of glomerular diseases (glomeruli are tiny structures in the kidney that filter waste products from the blood). It is characterized by an increase in capillary wall permeability (leakiness) to serum protein in association with excretion of large amounts of protein in the urine, low albumin levels in the blood, edema (swelling), and hyperlipidemia (high lipid or fat levels in the blood).
The kidney's filtering membrane is constructed like a sieve that allows small molecules to pass through the blood but retains the larger protein molecules. In nephrotic syndrome (nephrosis), the membrane is damaged by another illness, such as diabetes, or an injury, and large amounts of these proteins suddenly leak from the blood into the urine. Within a few days, the blood proteins are markedly depleted. The flow back to the blood of normal tissue fluid is also impaired, leading to tissue swelling (edema).
Minimal change disease (MCD) is a subtype of nephrotic syndrome and accounts for about 20 percent of cases of nephrotic syndrome in adults.
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