Kidney Pathology Flashcards
Where is pain present if it is renal pain?
• a constant dull ache in the loin.
What is renal colic?
- Severe waxing and waning pain that is “loin to groin”
* Normally caused by renal stones, clot or sloughed papilla.
What is an AKI?
- Acute kidney injury
* Indicates a significant decline in Kidney function over several hours or days.
What is an AKI usually secondary to?
• Circulatory dysfunction.
→ Hypotension
→ Hypovolaemia
→ Sepsis
• Urinary obstruction
What is nephrotic syndrome?
• Proteinuria (> 3g/day) + Oedema + Hypoalbuminaemia
What is the threshold for proteinuria?
> 150mg protein loss per day
What is the definition of CKD?
- Chronic Kidney Disease is defined as irreversible, substantial and long standing loss of renal function.
- Classified according to GFR.
What can a raised erythropoietin be a sign of?
Hypoxaemia → kidney makes more EPO to transport more O2.
This is secondary polycythaemia.
What is it important to remember with Haematuria?
It is often the only sign of Bladder cancer (Frank, painless, >40 yrs, smoker)
How do we calculate/stage an AKI?
↑ serum Creatinine + ↓ urine output
KDIGO staging system 1-3 measuring an increase in serum creatinine and decrease in urine output
- 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
- 2-2.9 x baseline cratinine + Low urine output >12 hrs
- > 3 x baseline creatinine + anurea or 0.3ml/kg/h >24hrs
Name 3 renal vascular disease?
- Renovascular disease.
- Haemolytic uraemic Syndrome
- Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura
What is renovascular disease?
It is defined as stenosis of the renal artery or one of its branches.
• Artherosclerosis (80%), stroke, peripheral vascular disease +other rare causes.
What are the signs and tests and treatment for renovascular disease?
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
What is Haemolytic uraemic syndrome?
• 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
What are the symptoms of Haemolytic uraemic syndrome?
- Abdominal pain
- Bloody diarrhoea
- AKI
What are the tests for Haemolytic uraemic syndrome?
- Haematuria/proteinuria
- ↓platelets
- ↓ HB
- Blood film → fragmented red blood cells
What is Thrombotic thrombocytopaenic purpura?
- 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.
What is glomerulonephritis?
Inflammation of the glomeruli and nephrons
What happens in the 3 stages to glomerulonephritis damaging the kidney?
- 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
Depending on the magnitude of the damage caused, what are the presentation of damage to the glomeruli and nephrons caused by glomerulonephritis?
- Blood pressure: normal to malignant
- Urine dipstick: Proteinuria: mild → severe, haematuria: mild → macroscopic
- Renal function: normal → impaired
Glomerulonephritis can be split into 2 differing syndromes, what are they called?
Nephrotic and Nephritic
What is the difference between nephrotic and nephric syndrome?
Nephrotic : BP- normal/mild, Urine - Proteinuria, GFR - Normal
Nephric : BP- Moderate/sever, Urine: haematuria, GFR - Moderate/severe
What triad of symptoms constitutes nephrotic syndrome?
- Proteinuria (> 3g/24hr) causing
- Hypoalbuminaemia (< 30g/L) and
- Oedema