Kidney Dysfunction Flashcards
GFR vs body size in dogs
small dogs = high GFR and low creatinine
large dogs = low GFR and high creatinine
stages of kidney dysfunction
normal <–> intrinsic injury –> structural damage –> kidney failure
subclinical stages of kidney dysfunction
normal
intrinsic injury
can get compensation from other kidney to maintain function
can fully recover from these stages
clinical stages of kidney dysfunction
structural damage
kidney failure
can NOT compensate completely
can NOT fully recover - recovery will initiate progressive damage pathways
kidney markers during CKD stage 1
creatinine WNL
kidney markers during CKD stage 2
detectable loss of functional renal mass (>75%)
creatinine above normal ranges
kidney markers during CKD stages 3/4
small decreases in GFR (small losses of renal mass) cause large increases in serum creatinine
what is a hallmark feature of CKD
progression even after initial injury is resolved
causes kidney functional markers to increase exponentially
what does inverse creatinine measure
linearizes the rate of change in kidney function over time to predict progression of CKD
negative slope on inverse creatinine graph
progressive disease
positive/no slope on inverse creatinine graph
stable/unchanging renal function
how does the kidney respond during CKD
compensation - remaining nephrons will hypertrophy to maintain global GFR
clinical signs of early stage CKD
PU/PD
anorexia
unconcentrated urine
urinary incontinence
weight loss
GI signs
signs of decreased urine concentrating ability show up first
clinical signs of advanced stage CKD
occurs at <25-30% remaining functional mass - kidneys unable to compensate/maintain homeostasis
anorexia
vomiting/nausea
weight loss
unthriftiness
what does high BUN measure in terms of CKD
progression of clinical signs
affected by extra-renal factors, detects severity of clinical signs