Thromboembolic complications in the nephrotic syndrome: Pathophysiology and clinical management
Received 4 March 2005; received in revised form 4 March 2005; accepted 8 March 2005.
Abstract
Patients with the nephrotic syndrome are at increased risk of developing venous and arterial thromboembolism, the most common of which is renal vein thrombosis. There are several unanswered or controversial issues relating to the nephrotic syndrome and thromboembolism, which include the mechanism of thromboembolism, and optimal diagnostic and anticoagulant management strategies. This review will discuss several of these issues: the epidemiology and clinical spectrum of thromboembolic disease occurring in patients with the nephrotic syndrome; the pathophysiology of the hypercoagulable state associated with the nephrotic syndrome; the diagnosis of renal vein thrombosis in the nephrotic syndrome; and the evidence for prophylactic and therapeutic anticoagulation strategies in such patients.
Department of Medicine, McMaster University, 25 Charlton Ave. East, Suite 708 Hamilton, ON, Canada, L8N lY2