6 - AKI Flashcards

1
Q

If a woman has a urine dipstick test and tests positive for leukocyte esterase but negative for nitrates, what does this mean?

A
  • UTI is caused by an organism that is not gram negative
  • Usually Staphylococcus saprophyticus

(honeymoon cystitis)

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2
Q

What is the most common organism causing a catheter acquired UTI?

A

Staph epidermidis

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3
Q

What is the most common presenting complaint of a male with a UTI?

A

Dysuria

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4
Q

Why may a patient have ankle oedema and high serum creatinine with SLE?

A

Oedema: nephrotic syndrome, loss of oncotic pressure in the blood as hypoalbuminemia so loss of fluid to interstitium

Creatinine: immune deposits in the blood causin ischameia and cell death of muscles

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5
Q

What is the definition of an AKI?

A
  • Decline in the GFR/renal function over a short period of time with the decline in GFR being measured by increase in serum creatinine
  • 3 stages
  • eGFR should be >90ml/min
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6
Q

How much of the cardiac output does the kidney recieve?

A

25%

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7
Q

What are the some of the criteria used by NICE for an AKI?

A
  • Rise in serum creatinine of 26umol/L or greater within 48 hours
  • 50% or greater rise in serum creatinine within past 7 days
  • Fall in urine output to less than 0.5mL/Kg for 6 hours in adults and 8 hours in children
  • 25% or greater fall in eGFR in children in the past 7 days
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8
Q

What are the two types of AKI?

A

- Oliguric or non-oliguric

  • Oliguria: less than 500ml of urine a day or less than 20ml an hour
  • Anuria less than 100ml urine a day. Usually indicates blockage of urine flow and severe damage.
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9
Q

What is uraemia?

A

Signs anf symptoms of kidney failure characterised by a raised level of urea in the blood

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10
Q

What are the three different classifications of causes of AKI and some examples of each?

A

- Prerenal: decreased renal perfusion, is reversible if recognised quickly. 85% of AKIs, e.g sepsis, hypovolaemia

- Renal: usually acute tubular injury (ATI), drugs, rhabdomyolysis, myeloma

- Post renal: obstruction to urine flow in one of three places. 10-15% of AKIs

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11
Q

How can pre-renal AKI become intrinsic AKI?

A
  • If pre-renal AKI not identified quickly cells are starved of oxygen and the cells with highest metabolic requirements are at risk, proximal tubules
  • This can then cause ATI to occur
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12
Q

How can we treat AKI?

A
  • Depends on cause e.g pre-renal need to restore volume or pump, postrenal need to clear obstruction

- Correctly manage fluid and electrolytes

  • ATI is supportive, need to avoid nephrotoxins, maintain good kidney perfusion, restrict solutes like potassium, provide nutritional support
  • Dialysis if cannot conrol electrolytes or maintain acid-base balance
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13
Q

How does the treatment for intrinsic AKI differ to pre/post renal AKI?

A

Intrinsic treatment often requires immunosuppressants but the others require supportive treatment

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14
Q

What is the first test that should be done when you suspect an AKI?

A

Urine dipstick

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15
Q

What is fibromuscular dysplasian?

A
  • Non-atherosclerotic, non inflammatory disease of the blood vessels that causes abnormal growth within the wall of an artery, usually in renal and carotid arteries
  • Causes renal artery stenosis so may be hypertension and poorly perfused kidney
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16
Q

What is the mortality of AKI?

A

25% TO 50% depending on co-morbidities

17
Q

What are the stages of CKD?

A
18
Q

What are some of the causes of CKD?

A
19
Q

What are some drugs that can cause intrinsic AKI?

A
  • Nephrotoxi antibiotics like gentamicin
  • ACE inhibitors
  • NSAIDs
20
Q

What will happen to a patients serum urea in the following scenarios:

  • Upper GI bleed?
  • Volume depletion?
  • Malnutrition?
A

- Bleed: raised urea as blood Hb is digested so more urea. If someone has raised urea but not raised creatinine suspect this

- Volume: increase as more ADH so more UT1

- Malnutrition: decrease due to enzymes in the urea cycle

21
Q

What is the definition of acute tubular injury and what are some risk factors for this?

A

Damage to kidney tubule cells due to ischaemia or nephrotoxic drugs

Risk factors are anything causing renal failure

22
Q

What is this patient’s acid base status and why do they have a low bicarbonate level?

A
  • Mixed metabolic and respiratory acidosis
  • Low bicarb as ketoacidosis from alcohol and lactic acidosis from laying on the ground so bicarb reacts with this
23
Q

What are the causes of elevated anion gap metabolic acidosis?

A

- High gap: often due to lactic acidosis, ketoacidosis and methanol intake which react with bicarbonate to produce another anion

- Normal gap: low bicarb so chloride increases to compensate

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7657dEp51so

24
Q

What has caused this lady’s AKI and are her serum sodium and potassium what we expect?

A
  • Volume depletion due to D and V with contributions from spironolactone/ramipril being nephrotoxic. Prerenal
  • Would expect high serum potassium as AKI
  • Would expect low sodium due to diarrhoea and spironolactone
  • Need to do urine dipstick to see if immunological or renal cause as this will change the management
25
Q

What are some examples of nephrotoxic drugs?

A
  • Spironolactone
26
Q

What are some clinical features of renal artery stenosis?

A
27
Q

Why may someone taking ramipril have a raised serum creatinine and urea?

A

Declined kidney function as ramipril is a ACE-inhibitor so stops AngII being produced

AngII normally causes vasoconstriction of efferent arteriole so without it vasodilation will occur and GFR will fall

28
Q

Why is the eGFR equation valid in CKD more than in a healthy patient and why is it not valid in an AKI?

A
  • Underestimates healthy people and children as mainly CKD patients in study to make equation
  • Calculations assume creatinine levels are relative stable over a few days and not rapidly changing like they are in AKI
29
Q

What are some complications of CKD?

A

Acidosis can lead to headache, sleepiness, seizures, diarrhoea, nausea, vomiting

30
Q

How can we measure rhabdomyolysis and what is the danger of this?

A
  • Serum creatinine kinase over 50,000
  • Can lead to AKI
31
Q

What renal changes can occur with prostatic hyperplasia?

A
  • Hydronephrosis due to obstruction so cortical atropy and eventually CKD