Approximately 20% to 40% of patients with type 1 or type 2 diabetes mellitus develop diabetic kidney disease.

This clinical syndrome characterized by:Persistent albuminuria (> 300 mg/24 h, or > 300 mg/g creatinine)Relentless decline in glomerular filtration rate (GFR)Raised arterial blood pressureEnhanced cardiovascular morbidity and mortality.There is a characteristic histopathology.

In classical diabetic nephropathy:

the first clinical sign is moderately increased urine albumin excretion (microalbuminuria: 30–300 mg/24 h, or 30–300 mg/g creatinine; albuminuria grade A2).Untreated microalbuminuria will gradually worsen, reaching clinical proteinuria or severely increased albuminuria (albuminuria grade A3) over 5 to 15 years.The GFR then begins to decline, and without treatment, end stage kidney failure is likely to result in 5 to 7 years.Although albuminuria is the first sign of diabetic nephropathy, the first symptom is usually peripheral edema, which occurs at a very late stage.Regular, systematic screening for diabetic kidney disease is needed in order to identify patients at risk of or with presymptomatic diabetic kidney disease.Annual monitoring of urinary albumin-to-creatinine ratio, estimated GFR, and blood pressure is recommended.

Stage of diabetic nephropathy

  1. Stage One
    • manifests by renal hyperperfusion and hypertrophy
    • This stage starts with the onset of diabetes before insulin treatment.
    • Changes are at least partly reversible by insulin treatment.
    • Glomerular filtration rate is increased due to hyperperfusion
  2. Stage Two
    • Characterized by clinical silence and morphologic changes characteristic of diabetic glomerulosclerosis.
    • Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) is still higher than normal during this stage.
    • During good diabetes control, abumin excretion is normal
    • physical exercise unmasks changes in albuminuria not demonstrable in the resting situation.
    • During poor diabetes control albumin excretion goes up both at rest and during exercise
    • Some diabetic patients continue in this stage throughout their lives.
  3. Stage Three
    • Microalbuminuria is the salient feature, also called the stage of incipient nephropathy
    • It defined as UAE >30 mg/d, >20 μg/min, or albumin:creatinine ratio (ACR) >30 mg/g creatinine.
    • This stage is initially associated with increased GFR.
    • GFR starts a consistent decline that becomes more evident with the continuous increase of UAE above 300 mg/d, 200 μg/min, or when ACR exceeds 300 mg/g.
  4. Stage Four
    • This is the stage of overt nephropathy.
    • Progressive increase in blood pressure is usually associated with these renal changes.
    • When the associated high blood pressure is left untreated, renal function declines,
    • the mean fall rate being around 1 ml/min/mo.
    • Long-term antihypertensive treatment reduces the fall rate by about 60% 7 and thus postpones uremia considerably.
  5. Stage Five
    • Itis End Stage Kidney Failure with uremia due to diabetic nephropathy.
    • As many as 25% of the population presently have end-stage kidney failure

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Management of diabetic nephropathy

  1. Control of blood pressure
  2. Control of blood sugar
  3. Quitting smoking
  4. Diet control: Dietary salt restriction
  5. Hypolipidemic treatment
  6. Treatment of hyperuricemia
  7. Phosphate handling