Kidney Pathology Flashcards

1
Q

Where is pain present if it is renal pain?

A

• a constant dull ache in the loin.

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2
Q

What is renal colic?

A
  • Severe waxing and waning pain that is “loin to groin”

* Normally caused by renal stones, clot or sloughed papilla.

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3
Q

What is an AKI?

A
  • Acute kidney injury

* Indicates a significant decline in Kidney function over several hours or days.

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4
Q

What is an AKI usually secondary to?

A

• Circulatory dysfunction.

→ Hypotension

→ Hypovolaemia

→ Sepsis

• Urinary obstruction

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5
Q

What is nephrotic syndrome?

A

• Proteinuria (> 3g/day) + Oedema + Hypoalbuminaemia

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6
Q

What is the threshold for proteinuria?

A

> 150mg protein loss per day

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7
Q

What is the definition of CKD?

A
  • Chronic Kidney Disease is defined as irreversible, substantial and long standing loss of renal function.
  • Classified according to GFR.
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8
Q

What can a raised erythropoietin be a sign of?

A

Hypoxaemia → kidney makes more EPO to transport more O2.

This is secondary polycythaemia.

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9
Q

What is it important to remember with Haematuria?

A

It is often the only sign of Bladder cancer (Frank, painless, >40 yrs, smoker)

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10
Q

How do we calculate/stage an AKI?

A

↑ serum Creatinine + ↓ urine output

KDIGO staging system 1-3 measuring an increase in serum creatinine and decrease in urine output

  1. Serum creatinine increase of >26umol/l in 48 hr or 1.5 x baseline with a urine output <0.5ml/kg/h for 6 hrs or more
  2. 2-2.9 x baseline cratinine + Low urine output >12 hrs
  3. > 3 x baseline creatinine + anurea or 0.3ml/kg/h >24hrs
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11
Q

Name 3 renal vascular disease?

A
  • Renovascular disease.
  • Haemolytic uraemic Syndrome
  • Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura
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12
Q

What is renovascular disease?

A

It is defined as stenosis of the renal artery or one of its branches.

• Artherosclerosis (80%), stroke, peripheral vascular disease +other rare causes.

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13
Q

What are the signs and tests and treatment for renovascular disease?

A

Signs:

• refractive ↑BP, Flash oedema (no left ventricular impairment on cardiac echo), Abdominal +/- carotid/femoral bruits.

Test: Renal angiography is gold standard test

treatment: Antihypertensives +/- revascularisation surgery

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14
Q

What is Haemolytic uraemic syndrome?

A

• Characterised By MAHA (microangiopathic Haemolytic anaemia)

• Caused by E.coli (90% strain o157) that attacks endothelial cells triggering thrombosis, platlet consumption and fibrin strand deposition mainly in
renal microvasculature which causes the mechanical destruction of red blood cells.

  • Thrombocytopaenia and AKI result.
  • Typically affects young people
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15
Q

What are the symptoms of Haemolytic uraemic syndrome?

A
  • Abdominal pain
  • Bloody diarrhoea
  • AKI
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16
Q

What are the tests for Haemolytic uraemic syndrome?

A
  • Haematuria/proteinuria
  • ↓platelets
  • ↓ HB
  • Blood film → fragmented red blood cells
17
Q

What is Thrombotic thrombocytopaenic purpura?

A
  • often considered on a spectrum with Haemolytic uraemic syndrome, all patients will have MAHA (often with jaundice) and low platelets.
  • It is a either genetic or acquired issues with the cleaving vWf that essentially leads to platelet aggregation and fibrin deposition in small vessels causing microthrombi.
18
Q

What is glomerulonephritis?

A

Inflammation of the glomeruli and nephrons

19
Q

What happens in the 3 stages to glomerulonephritis damaging the kidney?

A
  • Damage to the glomerulus restricts blood flow leading to a compensatory BP rise.
  • Damage to the filtration mechanism allows protein and blood to enter the urine.
  • Loss of usual filtration capacity leads to AKI
20
Q

Depending on the magnitude of the damage caused, what are the presentation of damage to the glomeruli and nephrons caused by glomerulonephritis?

A
  1. Blood pressure: normal to malignant
  2. Urine dipstick: Proteinuria: mild → severe, haematuria: mild → macroscopic
  3. Renal function: normal → impaired
21
Q

Glomerulonephritis can be split into 2 differing syndromes, what are they called?

A

Nephrotic and Nephritic

22
Q

What is the difference between nephrotic and nephric syndrome?

A

Nephrotic : BP- normal/mild, Urine - Proteinuria, GFR - Normal

Nephric : BP- Moderate/sever, Urine: haematuria, GFR - Moderate/severe

23
Q

What triad of symptoms constitutes nephrotic syndrome?

A
  1. Proteinuria (> 3g/24hr) causing
  2. Hypoalbuminaemia (< 30g/L) and
  3. Oedema