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JOURNAL ARTICLE
Acute renal failure in children with idiopathic nephrotic syndrome.
Pediatric Nephrology 2003 December
Acute renal failure (ARF) is an uncommon but alarming complication of idiopathic nephrotic syndrome. The renal failure could be secondary to causes evident from the history and evaluation, such as severe intravascular volume depletion, acute tubular necrosis, allergic interstitial nephritis, bilateral renal vein thrombosis, acute pyelonephritis, or rapid progression of the original glomerular disease. It may be termed idiopathic if the underlying cause is undetermined. We present three children with idiopathic nephrotic syndrome who were admitted with acute renal failure. One case was due to drug-induced allergic interstitial nephritis. The other two were idiopathic in nature. Improvement in renal function occurred in the three patients over a variable period of 10 days to 4 weeks. After careful exclusion of well-known causes of acute renal failure, idiopathic acute renal failure (IARF) should be considered as a diagnostic possibility in these patients. The exact pathophysiology of IARF is not understood. Possible proposed explanations include interstitial edema, tubular obstruction, altered glomerular permeability, and unrecognized hypovolemia.
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