Case 90 - kidney system Flashcards
what is the definition of AKI?
- suddent development of renal insuffiency that results in retention of urea and other nitrogenous waste products
acute kidney injury network (AKIN) staging system for AKI (< 48 hours)
Stage 1
- increase SCr > 0.3 mg/dL
- UOP < 0.5 ml/kg/hr for > 6 hours
Stage 2
- baseline increase > 2 to 3 fold
- UOP < 0.5 ml/kg/hr for > 12 hrs
Stage 3
- baseline increase > 3 fold or inititation of RRT
- UOP < 0.3 ml/kg/hr > 24 hours or anuria > 12 hours
What are the three etiologies of renal failure, and what is the pathophysio mechanism behind them?
3 etiologies of renal failure: pre-renal, renal, postrenal
anatomy - renal artery –> afferent arteriole –> glomerulus for filtration into renal rubules –> efferent arteriole
1) Pre-renal AKI
* pathophysiology - decreased blood flow to kidneys
a) decreased renal artery perfusion
- hypovolemia (poor intake or diuretics) - fluids
- low CO states (CHF) - inotropes
- hypotension (dec SVR) - vasopressors
- impair renal artery dilation (NSAIDs - inhibit cyclooxyngease)
b) afferent arteriole constriction
* Norepi, angiotensin, prostaglandins
c) efferent arteriole vasodilation
* ACE-i and ARBs
2) post renal azotemia
- pathophys - obstruction to urine flow beyond the kidney
- ureteral obstruction by stones, constriction, hydronephrosis
3) intrarenal renal failure
- intrinsic kidney disease
-
most common is ATN = renal ischemia 2/2 renal hypoperfusion. tubular cell injury
- could be due to nephrotoxins, hemoglobinuria, myoglobinuria (tx with fluid bolus, maintain renal perfusion, alkalinzation)
What lab tests can you order to look at pre renal vs renal AKI?
assessment of AKI and oliguria
- foley catheter - trend hourly UOP
- hemodynamics and volume status
- is preload optimized?
- Echo - look at ventricular function
- low CO?
- nephrotoxic drugs given recently?
- aminiglycosides, PCN, vanco
Labs:
- order BUN, SCr, elecrolytes, osmolality
Pre - Renal:
- BUN/Cr = > 20:1
- urine osmolality = > 500 (concentrated)
- Urine specific gravity = > 1.016 (concentratd)
- urine Na+ = < 20
- FENa = < 1%
Renal
- BUN/Cr = < 20:1
- urine osmolality = < 400 (not concentrated)
- Urine specific gravity = < 1.010 (not concentrated)
- urine Na+ = > 40
- FENa = > 2%
What is the pathogenesis of contrast-induced nephropathy?
contrast induced nephropathy
- causes renal vasoconstrictoin and direct tubular injury (cytotoxic effects of tubular cells 2/2 oygen free radical formation)
how can you reduce the risk of contrast induced nephropathy?
- radiocontrast media
- non-ionized, low-osmolar or isoosmolar contrast + limit volume
- discontinue nephrotoxic drugs (NSAIDs, metformin)
-
Volume expansion
- 0.9% NaCl 1 mL/kg/hr for 24 hours
-
Sodium Bicarb
- administer prior to procedure, and continue for 6 hours after the procedure
-
Acetylcysteine
- 1200mg BID
- antioxidant and vasodilatory properities
What are indications for dialysis?
AEIOU
Acidosis
- impaired renal function leads to loss of bicarb and accumulation of acids
-
can try to tx with Sodium bicarb
- be aware of use of NaCo3 with hypernatremic, volume overload, respiratory acidosis pts
Electrolytes (hyperkalemia)
- exogenous source (potassium supplement, IVF, ACE-I
- tumor lysis syndrome, hematoma reabsorption, rhabdomyolysis
Intoxication
Overload (fluid)
- CHF patients
- dialysis used if refractory to diuretics and inotopric agents
Uremia
- urgent dialysis with encephalopathy, pericarditis, or hemorrhage
why would you want to use continous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) as opposed to intermintent hemodilaysis?
Intermittent hemodialysis
- Pro - rapid decrease in plasma solute concentration
- Cons - can cause hypotension (HD instability)
CRRT
- Pro - well tolerated in hemodynamically unstable patients
- clears solute, but at slower rates than IHD
Slow continous ultrafiltration
- form of CRRT
- removes fluid, not solutes (used with heart failure pts)
what are complications encoutered with RRT?
1) Hypotension
* fluid reomved at a rapid rate in a patient with poor oncotic pressure (sepsis, heart failure)
2) electrolyte derangements
* solute clearance also leads to electrolyte depletion –> arrythmias (hypokalemia, hypocalcemia)
3) large bore CVC
- depending on site, you have its complications (infection, pneumo)
- dialysis lines in subclavian vein can lead to scarring –> unable to use AV fistula in ipsilateral hand if needed in the future
4) Anticoagulation
* CRRT requires a/c –> slow flow rate leads to activation of clotting factors –> can clot filter
what is better, IHD or CRRT?
neither is superior
- HD unstable pts, like ICU pts, will benefit from CRRT (b/c solute and water removed over a longer period of time at a slower rate)
- consider IHD for life-threatening hyperkalemia or ingested toxins