Acute Kidney injury Flashcards
What is AKI?
Clinical syndrome – abrupt decline in actual GFR (days to weeks), upset of ECF volume, electrolyte and acid/base homeostasis, accumulation of nitrogenous waste products.
What is AKI clinically defined as?
Increase in serum creatinine by >/= 26.5 micro mol within 48 hours
Increase in serum creatinine by >/= 1.5 times baseline within 7 days
Urine volume < 0.5ml/kg/h for 6 hours (may not be used anymore)
What are the stages of AKI
There are 3 stages each with worsening serum creatinine levels and urine output.
What is the aetiology of AKI?
Incidence difficult to assess – variable criteria, In UK approximately 200p/mp/yr and ¼ of these need RRT (renal replacement therapy). 5% of hospitalised patients. 25-30% of patients admitted to intensive care unit. AKI is a medical emergency.
What causes AKI?
- Pre-renal failure – blood supply compromised i.e. volume depletion, heart failure and cirrhosis etc.
- Intrinsic renal failure – renal artery/vein occlusion or renal parenchymal diseases – intrarenal vascular glomerulonephritis, ischaemic ATN (acute tubular necrosis), Toxic ATN, interstitial disease and intrarenal obstruction.
- Post renal failure (obstruction) – anything that compresses the urinary tract outside of the kidney
What is the most common cause of AKI?
85% due to prerenal causes or ATN (acute tubular necrosis) in the UK. Worldwide can be due to infective causes such as haemorrhagic fevers, diarrhoea or obstetric.
What is Pre renal AKI?
Acute GFR reduced due to decreased renal blood flow. No cell damage so kidneys work hard to restore blood flow. Avid reabsorption of salt and water (aldosterone and ADH release). Responds to fluid resuscitation i.e. IV fluids.
How does autoregulation change with constant deviation from normal BP and what consequences does this have for Pre renal AKI?
Note kidney autoregulation takes place across a certain range of blood pressure. In hypertensive patients (the elderly) the kidneys adapt and have a new range of pressures they can autoregulate between. So if someone who is normally hypertensive resents with a BP of 110/70 then this could be a problem.
Whats the difference between afferent and efferent arterioles/nerves
Afferent is away from the heart/stimulus (for nerves).
When does autoregulation fail in normal patients?
When autoregulation responses are overwhelmed AKI occurs. Maximal dilation of arterioles at MAP of 80mmHg (higher if normally hypertensive) and below this GFR falls rapidly.
What extrinsic modulators can exacerbate pre renal AKI?
Extrinsic modulators of renal haemodynamics include NSAIDs and ACE inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers. NSAIDs inhibits prostaglandins so the afferent arterioles cannot dilate as much whilst ACE inhibitors and ARBs block Ang II meaning you can’t constrict the efferent arteriole. Both of these drugs prevent your from responding to changes in GFR and so patients on them can rapidly progress into AKI
How can we categorise different causes of pre renal failures?
Reduced effect extracellular fluid volume:
-Hypovolaemia
-Cardiac failure
Systemic vasodildation e.g. sepsis
Impaired renal autoregulation
- preglomerular vasoconstriction
- post glomerular vasodilation
What is ATN?
Note you do not actually get tubular necrosis just cell damage that cannot be immediately reversed, these cells fall of the basement membrane, block tubes and stop working i.e. they cannot reabsorb salt and water efficiently or expel excess water and so aggressive fluid resuscitation risk fluid overload. This is particularly harmful in patients with heart failure.
What causes ATN?
Can be caused by: ischaemia, nephrotoxins or sepsis.
Why are tubular cells so sensitive to hypoxia?
The blood flow to the tubular parts of the nephron comes from the efferent arterioles of the corresponding glomerulus. As this blood moves, along it becomes increasingly deoxygenated. This means there is a gradient of PO2 of oxygen through the cortex into the medulla. At the cortex-medullary boundary, the cells are at the cusp of hypoxia.