Hereditary Nephritis

What It Is

Hereditary nephritis is an inherited glomerular basement membrane disorder causing progressive protein-losing kidney disease, often associated with collagen type IV defects and eventual chronic kidney failure.

Also Called: familial nephritis; hereditary glomerulopathy; inherited nephritis; Alport-like nephropathy

Breeds Affected: Bull Terrier; Dalmatian


The Idiot-Proof Explanation

The kidney’s filter is built wrong. At first, protein leaks into the urine. Later, the damaged filter cannot do its job, and the dog can move toward kidney failure. It is not a bladder infection. It is the plumbing filter failing at the design level.


What Causes It

Hereditary nephritis is genetic. Many forms involve defects in the glomerular basement membrane, the filtration structure inside the kidney.

Because the filter is abnormal, protein leaks into the urine and kidney damage progresses over time. In some breed-specific forms, males may be more severely affected depending on inheritance pattern.

  • Protein in the urine can be an early warning sign.
  • Progression can lead to chronic kidney disease or kidney failure.
  • Some forms are linked to collagen type IV gene defects.
  • Breeding decisions should be based on verified breed-specific inheritance and testing information.

This is not a “kidneys are a little sensitive” problem. It is inherited kidney-filter disease.


What This Means for Life With This Dog

Owners may start with a dog that looks normal but has proteinuria on screening. That is why urine testing matters in at-risk lines.

As disease progresses, the dog may need kidney diet, blood pressure medication, protein-loss management, repeat labs, and monitoring for chronic kidney disease.

For breeders, this is one of those conditions where pretending the line is “mostly healthy” can create puppies with a built-in renal countdown.


Can It Be Fixed?

Hereditary nephritis is not curable. Treatment focuses on slowing kidney damage, reducing protein loss, controlling blood pressure, managing complications, and protecting quality of life.


Symptoms Owners May Notice

Protein in the urine: Early disease may show up on urinalysis before the dog acts sick.

Increased thirst or urination: As kidney function declines, the dog may drink and pee more than normal.

Weight loss or poor appetite: Kidney disease can cause nausea, appetite changes, and gradual weight loss.

Lethargy or worsening kidney values: Advanced disease can bring weakness, vomiting, dehydration, anemia, and ugly bloodwork.


Treatment Options

Urine and blood screening: Diagnosis often starts with urinalysis, urine protein:creatinine ratio, bloodwork, blood pressure, and repeat monitoring.

Kidney-protective management: Treatment may include renal diet, blood pressure control, medication to reduce protein loss, anti-nausea support, and fluid support if needed.

Breeding prevention: Breed-specific testing, pedigree awareness, and not breeding affected or risky dogs are the real prevention tools.


Recovery and Aftercare

Aftercare is chronic monitoring: urine protein checks, bloodwork, blood pressure, diet compliance, medications, and watching for appetite or hydration changes.


What Happens If You Wait

Protein in the urine is not decorative.

Waiting can allow progressive kidney damage, hypertension, worsening protein loss, and kidney failure. Early management may not cure it, but it can buy time and comfort.


Cost Reality Check

Costs depend on how early the disease is caught, how fast kidney function declines, and how much medication, monitoring, or supportive care is needed.

Care Level What It May Include Estimated Cost
Initial workup Exam, urinalysis, urine protein testing, bloodwork, and blood pressure screening. $250-$900
Ongoing management Renal diet, repeat labs, medications, blood pressure control, and chronic monitoring. $800-$3,000+ per year
Severe case Advanced kidney disease care, hospitalization, fluid therapy, severe hypertension management, or specialist care. $2,500-$10,000+

Stage at diagnosis: Catching proteinuria early is a very different financial mood than diagnosing kidney failure late.

Monitoring frequency: Kidney disease likes repeat labs. The spreadsheet of medical expenses will notice.

Blood pressure and protein loss: More complicated kidney disease usually means more medication and more rechecks.

Hospitalization: Vomiting, dehydration, or kidney crisis can push costs into emergency territory.


Budget Reality Check

Budget Item Estimated Cost
Urinalysis and bloodwork $200-$700
Blood pressure and urine protein monitoring $150-$600+ per visit set
Renal diet and medications $800-$3,000+ per year
Specialist consultation $500-$2,000+
Hospitalization for kidney crisis $1,500-$8,000+

Lifetime Cost Reality

Case Pattern Possible Lifetime Cost
Early monitored case $1,000-$5,000+
Chronic kidney management case $5,000-$15,000+
Advanced kidney failure case $10,000-$25,000+

Tell Me What I Should Really Expect

Hereditary nephritis is a kidney-filter problem that does not care how healthy the puppy looked at pickup.

Owners need monitoring and realistic kidney management. Breeders need verified inheritance information and honest screening. The kidneys do not give points for denial.