Assessment of kidney function using blood tests Flashcards
What kidney tests can be done in the lab?
U&E request gives serum concentrations of:
- Creatinine – Reference Interval higher in males than females
- Urea
- Sodium
- Potassium
- e-GFR calculated using serum creatinine concentration
Urine
- Albumin:Creatinine ratio (ACR)
- Protein:Creatinine ratio (PCR)
- Plus a range of supporting assays for Acute Kidney Injury (AKI) or Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
What is the rate of kidney blood flow?
1500mL/min
What is the equation for GFR?
GFR = (U x V)/S = ml/min
U = Urine concentration mmol/l
V = Urine flow rate ml/min
S = Serum concentration mmol/l
What does measurement of glomerular filtration require?
•A substance that is filtered and then neither absorbed or secreted in the renal tubules
24h urine collection and a blood sample
Why use creatinine for GFR?
- Derived from creatine in muscle
- Serum concentrations relatively stable
- 24 h urine output is also stable day to day
- No absorption and very little secretion in renal tubules
- Simple to measure
What causes variations in creatinine?
But variation in serum concentrations and 24h urine output by:
- Age
- Sex – male > female
- Lean body mass – ethnic origin
- Effect of Diet
How are creatinine variations overcome?
GFR related to body surface area – so standardise to a given body surface area
This allows:
- Comparison against a general standard
- Staging of renal disease
- Monitoring of change in renal filtration – individual or cohort
- Chosen standard = 1.73m2
What is the equation for eGFR?
MDRD equation as calculated in the laboratory computer:
eGFR = 175 x (serum creatinine)-1.154 x (age)-0.203 x (0.742 if female) x (1.21 if Afro-Caribbean)
This allows for variation by age, sex and ethnic origin
Age – decreasing GFR with age but largely offset by reducing muscle mass with age
MDRD = Modification of Diet in Renal Disease
- Very high plasma glucose – causes an osmotic diuresis leading to loss of water and sodium
- Vomiting – adding to his fluid loss
- Loss of salt and water – causes volume depletion leading to impaired renal function and also dehydration
- Failure of glucose metabolism leads to keto-acidosis – 3-OH butyrate
- Acidosis – plasma 3-OH butyrate and bicarbonate – lead to increased serum concentrations of potassium and phosphate
- Renal impairment – leads to potassium and phosphate accumulation and enhances the acidosis
What tests indicate dehydration?
Dehydration is very likely if the serum urea:creatinine ratio is greater than 100
NB – both measurements need to be in mmol/l
Some authors have used 80 as a cut-off
The mechanism is the passive re-absorption of urea in the nephron especially at low flow rates
Serum protein concentrations may also be elevated
What tests indicate AKI?
- a rise in serum creatinine of 26 µmol/L or greater within 48h,
- a 50% or greater rise in serum creatinine known or presumed to have occurred within the past 7 days,
- a fall in urine output to less than 0.5 mL/kg/hr for more than 6 hours for adults and more than 8 hours in children or young people,
- a 25% or greater fall in eGFR in children and young people < 18y
What is the AKI alert system?
These Alerts are calculated by the lab computer:
- AKI stage 1 is a rise of >1.5x baseline level, or of >26μmol/L within 48h
- AKI stage 2 is a rise of>2x baseline
- AKI stage 3 is a rise of>3x baseline or a rise of >1.5 baseline to >354μmol/L
What are the causes of AKI?
- Very elevated serum creatinine
- AKI Alert level 3
- Very raised serum CRP concentration
- Marked proteinuria – not just albumin – indicates marked glomerular damage
- Anaemia with a raised WBC
- Negative Anti-streptolysin O titre – not post-streptococcal
- Raised Anti-GBM antibody – GBM = glomerular basement membrane
This is Goodpasture’s syndrome – an important diagnosis as it requires treatment by plasma exchange to remove the antibody
This man was a body-builder
- High muscle mass
- High protein intake
- Strenuous muscle activity
- Pressing heavy weights
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Note – mild hypokalaemia is not uncommon in body-builders