acute kidney injury Flashcards

1
Q

what is the definition of AKI?

A

An abrupt (<48hrs) reduction in kidney
function defined as
– an absolute increase in serum creatinine by
>26.4µmol/l
– OR increase in creatinine by >50%
– OR a reduction in UO

this definition can only be applied following adequate fluid resuscitation and exclusion of obstruction

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2
Q

what are the risk factors for an AKI?

A

Older Age
CKD
Diabetes
Cardiac Failure
Liver Disease
PVD
Previous AKI
Hypotension
Hypovoleamia
Sepsis

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3
Q

what are some pre renal causes of AKI?

A

hypovolaemia- haemorrhage, volume depletion
hypotension- cardiogenic shock, distributive shock (eg sepsis)
renal hypoperfusion- NSAIDs, ACEi/ARB

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4
Q

what is pre renal AKI?

A

reversible volume depletion leading to oligouria (<0.5mls/kg/hr) and an increase in creatinine

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5
Q

what can untreated pre renal AKI lead to?

A

acute tubular necrosis

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6
Q

what is acute tubular necrosis?

A

common form of AKI in hospital
decreased renal perfusion
commonly caused by severe dehydration and sepsis. can also be caused by rhabdomyolysis and drug toxicity

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7
Q

what is the treatment for pre renal AKI?

A

assess for hydration (done clinically)
fluid challenge for hypovolaemia
- crystalloid (0.9 NaCl)
- DO NOT give 5% dextrose
- if >1000mls given and no improvement seek help

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8
Q

what is renal AKI?

A

inflammation or damage to cells causing AKI

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9
Q

what are causes of renal AKI?

A

vascular- vasculitis, renovascular disease
glomerular- glomerulonephritis
interstitial nephritis- drugs (abx, PPI), infection (TB), systemic (sarcoidosis)
tubular injury- ischaemia, drugs (gentamicin), contrast, rhabdomyolysis

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10
Q

what are the signs and symptoms of an AKI?

A

non specific symptoms eg weight loss, fatigue, nausea, itch
fluid overload eg oedema
uraemia, including itch and pericarditis
oligouria

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11
Q

what are the initial investigations for renal AKI?

A

U+E (check potassium)
FBC and coag screen (abnormal clotting and anaemia)
urinalysis (haematoproteinuria)
USS (obstruction?)
immunology (ANA, ANCA, GBM)

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12
Q

how is AKI treated?

A

good perfusion pressure
treat underlying cause
stop nephrotoxics
dialysis if remains anuric and uraemia

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13
Q

what are the life threatening complications of AKI?

A

hyperkalaemia
fluid overload (pulmonary oedema)
severe acidosis (pH<7.15)
uraemic pericardial effusion
severe uraemia (Ur>40)

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14
Q

what does 1 normal and 1 small kidney indicate?

A

renal artery stenosis

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15
Q

what is a post renal AKI?

A

AKI due to obstruction of urine flow leading to back pressure (hydronephrosis) and thus loss of concentrating ability

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16
Q

what are the causes of a post renal AKI?

A

stones, cancers, strictures, extrinsic pressure

17
Q

how is a post renal AKI treated?

A

relieve obstruction
-catheter
- nephrostomy
refer to urology if ureteric stenting required

18
Q

what is the range for hyperkalaemia?

A

> 5.5
life threatening >6.5

19
Q

what are the ECG changes in hyperkalaemia?

A

peaked T waves
flattened P waves
prolonged PR intervals and QRS duration

20
Q

what does calcium gluconate do in hyperkalaemia?

A

stabelise the cardiac membrane

21
Q

how is life threatening hyperkalaemia treated?

A

protect myocardium with 10mls 10% calcium gluconate (2-3mins)
Move K back into cells- insulin, with 50% dextrose and a salbutamol neb

22
Q

what are the indications for dialysis

A

Hyperkalaemia
– >7
– >6.5 unresponsive to medical therapy
Severe Acidosis
– pH < 7.15
Fluid overload
Urea >40, pericardial rub/effusion