Bartter syndrome
Overview and Pathophysiology
- Bartter syndrome encompasses a group of rare, primarily autosomal recessive, salt-losing tubulopathies.
- The fundamental defect lies in the impairment of sodium chloride (NaCl) reabsorption within the thick ascending limb (TAL) of the loop of Henle.
- Defective NaCl reabsorption directly causes severe renal salt wasting and subsequent extracellular fluid volume contraction.
- This volume depletion acts as a potent stimulus for the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS), resulting in marked secondary hyperaldosteronism.
- Elevated aldosterone levels drive compensatory sodium reabsorption in the distal tubule in exchange for the secretion of potassium (
) and hydrogen ( ) ions, generating the hallmark hypokalemic, hypochloremic metabolic alkalosis. - The primary transport defect abolishes the lumen-positive transepithelial voltage in the TAL, which is necessary for the paracellular reabsorption of calcium; this leads to marked hypercalciuria and predisposes the patient to nephrocalcinosis.
- Prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) synthesis is significantly upregulated, which further inhibits NaCl transport in the TAL, contributing to the massive polyuria and exacerbating the clinical severity.
Genetic Classification
- Bartter syndrome exhibits considerable genetic heterogeneity and is classified according to the specific mutated transport protein.
| Type | Gene | Affected Protein / Channel | Inheritance | Key Differentiating Features |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type I (Antenatal) | SLC12A1 | NKCC2 ( |
Autosomal Recessive | Antenatal onset, severe polyhydramnios, prematurity, nephrocalcinosis. |
| Type II (Antenatal) | KCNJ1 | ROMK (Apical |
Autosomal Recessive | Similar to Type I, but may feature transient neonatal hyperkalemia. |
| Type III (Classic) | CLCNKB | ClC-Kb (Basolateral |
Autosomal Recessive | Variable onset (usually infancy/childhood), milder phenotype, nephrocalcinosis is rare. |
| Type IV (with Deafness) | BSND (or CLCNKA/B) | Barttin ( |
Autosomal Recessive | Associated with congenital sensorineural deafness; notably lacks nephrocalcinosis. |
| Type V (Transient) | MAGED2 | MAGE-D2 protein | X-linked Recessive | Extreme prematurity and polyhydramnios, but spontaneously resolves by 2 to 18 months of age. |
Clinical Manifestations
Antenatal Bartter Syndrome (Types I, II, IV, V)
- Typically presents in utero with severe maternal polyhydramnios, driven by massive fetal polyuria, frequently leading to premature delivery.
- Neonates exhibit life-threatening episodes of hypovolemic dehydration, massive polyuria, and severe salt wasting.
- Physical examination may reveal a characteristic triangular facies with a prominent forehead, large eyes, protruding ears, and a drooping mouth.
- Growth retardation and failure to thrive are invariably observed early in the clinical course.
- Profound hypercalciuria typically leads to the development of medullary nephrocalcinosis within the first few months of life, with the notable exception of Type IV.
Classic Bartter Syndrome (Type III)
- Usually presents later in infancy or early childhood with polyuria, polydipsia, failure to thrive, and recurrent episodes of dehydration.
- Patients frequently experience muscle weakness, cramps, and fatigue secondary to chronic, profound hypokalemia.
Diagnosis
- Initial laboratory evaluation reveals profound hypokalemia, hypochloremia, and metabolic alkalosis.
- Urinary electrolytes demonstrate inappropriately elevated fractional excretion of sodium, potassium, and chloride despite systemic volume depletion.
- Urinary calcium excretion is classically elevated, a key feature differentiating it from Gitelman syndrome, where hypocalciuria is typical.
- Serum levels of renin and aldosterone are markedly elevated, alongside high urinary excretion of PGE2.
- Renal ultrasonography is crucial to identify nephrocalcinosis, which is characteristic of the antenatal forms.
- A definitive diagnosis and accurate subtyping are established via targeted molecular genetic testing.
- Conditions such as cystic fibrosis, chronic vomiting, and diuretic abuse must be meticulously excluded, as they can perfectly mimic the biochemical profile (pseudo-Bartter syndrome).
Management
- Acute management focuses on vigorous intravenous fluid resuscitation and the correction of profound electrolyte deficits, particularly critical in premature neonates.
- Long-term maintenance therapy relies on the generous, lifelong supplementation of sodium chloride and potassium chloride, often requiring doses of 1-3 mEq/kg/day or significantly higher.
- Prostaglandin synthesis inhibitors, primarily indomethacin (1-2.5 mg/kg/day) or selective COX-2 inhibitors, form the cornerstone of pharmacological therapy; they effectively reduce polyuria, normalize renin levels, and improve linear growth.
- Extreme caution is required when initiating NSAIDs in premature infants due to the heightened risks of necrotizing enterocolitis, gastrointestinal bleeding, and acute kidney injury.
- Potassium-sparing diuretics, such as spironolactone or amiloride, are frequently added to mitigate persistent distal potassium losses and reduce the required dose of oral potassium supplements.
- For patients with persistent hypomagnesemia, oral magnesium supplementation is required, though normalization of serum levels can be clinically challenging.
- Multidisciplinary care and serial monitoring are essential to assess for NSAID-induced nephrotoxicity, track the progression of chronic kidney disease, and optimize nutritional status.