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Bartter syndrome

Primary juxtaglomerular cell hyperplasia with secondary hyperaldosteronism (Also see hyperaldosteronism.) Etiology: - genetic defect in chloride reabsorption in the thick ascending loop of Henle Epidemiology: - occurs in children - far less common than Gitelman's syndrome [4] Pathology: 1) defect in chloride reabsorption in the thick ascending loop of Henle 2) defect in sodium reabsorption 3) pronounced salt wasting 4) secondary hyperaldosteronism 5) hypokalemic metabolic alkalosis 6) varying degrees of hypercalciuria 7) overproduction of prostaglandins 8) hyperplasia of juxtaglomerular & medullary interstitial cells Genetics: autosomal recessive inheritance Clinical manifestations: - typically presents in early childhood [4] - normal to low blood pressure [4] - no edema, mild volume depletion [4] - polyuria - nocturia - growth is generally retarded Laboratory: 1) arterial blood gas: metabolic alkalosis 2) basic metabolic panel - hypokalemia 2) aldosterone in serum markedly increased 3) renin in plasma mildly to moderately increased 4) magnesium in serum: hypomagnesemia 5) urinalysis: - urine chloride > 20 meq/L - normal to increased urine calcium [4] Special laboratory: - renal biopsy: juxtaglomerular hyperplasia Management: 1) prostaglandin inhibitors are temporarily effective 2) potassium supplementation 3) spironolactone (Aldactone) 4) ACE inhibitor

Interactions

disease interactions

Related

Gitelman syndrome

Specific

Bartter syndrome type 1 (SLC12A1 linked) Bartter syndrome type 2 (hyperprostanglandin E syndrome 2, KCNJ1 linked) Bartter syndrome type 3 (classic Bartter syndrome) Bartter syndrome type 4 (infantile Bartter syndrome with sensorineural deafness)

General

genetic disease of the kidney genetic syndrome (multisystem disorder) hyperaldosteronism

Database Correlations

OMIM correlations MORBIDMAP 600359

References

  1. Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, 14th ed. Fauci et al (eds), McGraw-Hill Inc. NY, 1998, pg 2049
  2. Mayo Internal Medicine Board Review, 1998-99, Prakash UBS (ed) Lippincott-Raven, Philadelphia, 1998, pg 622
  3. Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, 13th ed. Isselbacher et al (eds), McGraw-Hill Inc. NY, 1994, pg 1324
  4. Medical Knowledge Self Assessment Program (MKSAP) 17, 19 American College of Physicians, Philadelphia 2015, 2021 - Medical Knowledge Self Assessment Program (MKSAP) 19 Board Basics. An Enhancement to MKSAP19. American College of Physicians, Philadelphia 2022