DPD: Dialysis Flashcards
List 5 physiological implications of renal failure
Electrolyte misbalance (Hyperkalaemia, hyponatraemia)
Acidosis
Fluid retention
Retention of waste products
Secretory failure (Erythropoietin, 1.25 vitamin D)
List 4 symptoms caused by renal failure
Tiredness
SOB, oedema
Pruritis, nocturia, feeling cold, twitching
Poor appetite, nausea, loss of/nasty taste, weight loss
List 2 conditions that may arise as a consequence of renal failure. What is the symptomatic impact of these?
Anaemia: exacerbates tiredness
Renal bone disease: aches + pains, pruritis
What 7 pathological states may result if a patient with renal failure does not have renal replacement treatment?
Hyperkalaemia: arrythmias, cardiac arrest Pulmonary oedema Nausea + vomiting Malnutrition / cachexia Fits Increasing coma DEATH
What are the available renal replacement therapies?
Haemodialysis
Peritoneal dialysis
Transplantation
Describe haemodialysis
Hospital based treatment
4 hours, 3 x a week
Vascular access needed: Catheter or A-V fistula
Describe peritoneal dialysis
Home based treatment
Daily + continuous
Less haemodynamic stress
Limited by access to peritoneum + ability to do technique
What are 5 benefits of transplantation?
Better renal replacement Improvement in metabolic disorders Costs less in long-term Prolonged survival Improved QoL
What are 4 risks/ disadvantages of transplantation?
Older + sicker patients not eligible
Immunosuppression (Increased infection + malignancy)
Not a cure (Surgical complications + frequent hospital visits)
Often worse off if/when transplant fails
What conservative care non dialysis pathway may be taken in the elderly?
Active management of anaemia with ESA + IV iron
BP control: slow rate of decline + lower stroke risk
Optimise fluid balance: avoid over + under hydration
Symptom control, inc. pain
Joint management with palliative care team at end of life phase