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Revista Colombiana de Nefrología

versão On-line ISSN 2500-5006

Resumo

MURILLO, Luisa et al. Proteinuria in childhood: A case report of Dent disease. Rev. colom. nefrol. [online]. 2023, vol.10, n.2, 404.  Epub 01-Ago-2023. ISSN 2500-5006.  https://doi.org/10.22265/acnef.10.2.639.

Background:

In pediatric patients, proteinuria is a relatively frequent entity that can be physiological or pathological. The second one, due to an alteration at the glomerular level with the loss of large proteins or at the tubular level, characterized mainly by the loss of low molecular weight proteins and changes in the excretion of ions. Among the hereditary diseases that present with tubular proteinuria, Dent disease is a disease linked to the X chromosome. Therefore, it manifests essentially in males, but women can be carriers and have minor clinical manifestations of the disease. Dent and Friedman made the first description of this disease in 1964. Recently, most of the cases have been reported in China and Germany.

Objective:

To perform a revision of Dent disease, as well as the diagnostic approach of childhood proteinuria based in our case in order to suspect this disease.

Case description:

This is the case of a masculine patient, without relevant prenatal and personal antecedents, the son of a father with polycystic renal disease, who presents persistent proteinuria from the first months of life, and who, at seven years old, the presence of a variant in the CLCN5 gene -causing of type 1 Dent disease- was documented.

Discussion:

The persistent pathological proteinuria in childhood must be studied due to its possible relation with pathologies that could affect renal function. Moreover, the differentiation among glomerular and tubular proteinuria can guide us to perform additional studies, including genetic tests to diagnose infrequent pathologies like Dent disease.

Conclusion:

The diagnostic approach to rare causes of tubular proteinuria in childhood, such as Dent’s disease, requires joint assessment between pediatric nephrology and clinical genetics.

Palavras-chave : Case report; child; proteinuria; Dent disease..

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