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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Drcheech (talk | contribs) at 21:35, 13 October 2018 (Removed colon). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Possible topics

  • Hypercalciuria (stub/mid)
  • Interstitial nephritis (start/mid)
  • Hemodialysis (C/high)

Article evaluation: "Interstitial Nephritis"

  • Content:
    • Given the significant differences that extend beyond onset/duration of disease itself, it would be helpful to differentiate chronic vs acute TIN in the body of the article, not just intro.
    • Lack of histologic discussion as well as anatomic explanation of the role of the interstitium.
    • List of causes is quite narrow and lacks adequate explanation of pathophysiologic mechanisms of injury.
    • No epidemiologic data.
    • Picture/figure would be nice.
  • Tone:
    • Overall appropriate but could be more academic
  • Sources:
    • The PubMed PMID links seem to all work well.
      • Unfortunately, most of them are primary single study sources rather than secondary sources, reviews, etc.
    • The last resource links did not work so unable to confirm the reliability of this source.
    • Many of the sources are becoming dated.
  • Talk Page:
    • Nada
  • Would be great to restructure the topic per Wiki guidelines for Medicine related articles.

Working Bibliography

  1. Meyers CM, Perazella MA. Chapter 44: Chronic Tubulointerstitial Nephritis. NKF Primer on Kidney Disease. 2018.
  2. Brewster UC, Lucuano RL. Chapter 33: Acute Interstitial Nephritis. NKF Primer on Kidney Disease. 2018.
  3. Alon US. Chapter 44: Pediatric Tubulointerstitial Nephritis. Eds: Avner, Goldstein. Pediatric Nephrology. 2016.
  4. Zeisberg M, Kalluri R. Physiology of the Renal Interstitium. CJASN Renal Physiology for the Clinician. 2016.

Below you will find the entirely new article structure I plan to use (per Wiki guidelines for Medicine related articles). I am filling in edits gradually over time, using the secondary sources which will be continuously updated per the "Working Bibliography" above.

Interstitial nephritis

(insert anatomic cartoon picture from CJASN)

Interstitial nephritis, also known as tubulointerstitial nephritis, is inflammation of the area of the kidney known as the interstitium, which consists of a collection of cells, extracellular matrix, and fluid surrounding the renal tubules.[1] In addition to providing a scaffolding support for the tubular architecture, the interstitium has been shown to participate in the fluid and electrolyte exchange as well as endocrine functions of the kidney.[1] There are a variety of known factors that can provoke the inflammatory process within the renal interstitium, including pharmacologic, environmental, infectious and systemic disease contributors. The spectrum of disease presentation can range from an acute process to a chronic condition with progressive tubular cell damage and renal dysfunction.

Signs and symptoms

Causes

Drugs

(table)

Environmental Exposures

(Lead)

Infections

Systemic Diseases

(TINU, Immune-mediated, Malignancy)

Pathophysiology

(insert picture)

Diagnosis

Laboratory findings

Imaging studies

Pathology

Differential diagnosis

Treatment

Prognosis

Epidemiology

History

(Maybe...)

References

  1. ^ a b Zeisberg, Michael; Kalluri, Reghu (October 2015). [www.cjasn.org "Physiology of the Renal Interstitium"]. Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology. 10: 1831–1840. doi:10.2215/CJN.00640114. {{cite journal}}: Check |url= value (help)