Lecture 18: Clinical Problems: Kidney Failure Flashcards

1
Q

What is the main definition of Kidney Failure?

A

A reduction in Glomerular Filtration rate.

You may also get high K+, uraemia, high creatinine or oliguria, but not necessarily

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2
Q

What do you wanna do when you get a patient

A

Check History

Examination

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3
Q

What do you want to know when history taking?

A
Has she been peeing (at night?)
Breathless
Abdo pain
Vomiting blood?
Vomiting/ diarrhoea?
Past diabetic history?
Fever?
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4
Q

Examination

A
Fever?
Looks unwell?
BP?
Dryness of skin>
Chest auscultation
JVP (1-2cm normal)
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5
Q

High vs low JVP?

A
High= fluid overload
Low= Less fluid volume (volume depleted)
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6
Q

What does it mean if creatinine is really high (normal ~ 70)

A

Represents diminished kidney function as the kidneys are unable to remove this waste product

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7
Q

Which blood test is most important for distinguishing between acute and chronic Renal failure?

A

Haemaglobin!

The kidneys make erythropoietin (turns bone marrow cells into RBCs)
When renal failure occurs, obviously this stops happening BUT as RBC have a 120day lifespan, this can only be seen in bloodtests in CHRONIC kidney failure. (takes a while to become anaemic from this)

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8
Q

3 roles of the kidney

A

1) Remove fluid and electrolytes
2) Produce Erythropoietin
3) alpha hydroxylate vitamin D (Storage to active)

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9
Q

Acute Renal Failure

A

Acute deterioration of kidney function over a short period of time.
Usually reversible
Usually associated with another illness (eg vomiting/diarrhoea leads to dehydration)

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10
Q

Pre-renal Acute Kidney failure

A
  • Due to decreased perfusion of the kidneys
  • Generally low BP (bleeding, sepsis, dehydration, HF)

Some progress to intrinisic renal damage (ATN)

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11
Q

Renal Acute Kidney Failure

A
  • Mainly Acute Tubular Necrosis
  • Mainly from pre-renal that wasn’t treated in time

-Also RPGN

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12
Q

RPGN

A

Rapidly Progressive Glomerulonephritis

  • rapid acute renal failure
  • cresecents in glomeruli on biopsy
  • Red cells and casts in urine
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13
Q

Whats the best method to test for Post-renal Acute renal failure?

A

Ultrasound as usually a blockage (stone etc) (hydronephrosis)

(also palpation of bladder)

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14
Q
High BP
Oedema
High urea, creatinine, phosphate
Low Albumin
Low Haem
eGFR 6

What do they have?

A

Chronic kidney disease!

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15
Q

Signs/symptoms of fluid overload

A
EdemaDifficultly breathing lying down
crackles on auscultation
High BP
JVP increase
Dyspnea
Strong rapid pulse
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16
Q

Signs of CKD

A

No acute presentation until function is REALLY bad!

  • Malnutrition
  • Fluid Overload (high BP, oedema, pulm oedema)
  • Rash
  • Pericardial rub
17
Q

Apart from haem, what are some other tests helpful in confirming the diagnosis

A

Kidney Size <8cm (normal 10-11cm)

Presence of obstruction

18
Q

Whats the best treatment for CKD

A

Treat the high BP!! (<130/80)

Best BP treatment are ACE inhibitors (but many people are also on Beta-blockers, diuretics etc)

19
Q

Whats the most likely cause of CKD?

A

Diabetes (rates increasing!)
Hypertension
Glomerular disease

20
Q

Purpose and mechanism of ACE inhibitors.

A

Because this increased pressure leads to increase damage.
By blocking RAAS you decrease Na+ and water retention.

Act on efferent arteriole to VD leading to decreased blood pressure.