Lecture 6.5 Renal Disorders Flashcards
What are the two types of kidney failure?
Acute and Chronic
What separates acute from chronic kidney failure?
Chronic is irreversible damage and is progressive. It involves loss of function of nephrons.
Acute is abrupt but reversible. (sometimes)
What are the 3 kinds of acute renal failure?
Prerenal acute renal failure
Intrarenal acute renal failure
Postrenal acute renal failure
Define prerenal acute renal failure
Decreased blood supply to kidneys.
Causes:
Diminished blood volume
Severe hemorrhage
Define intrarenal acute renal failure
Abnormalities originating from within the kidney.
Causes:
Abnormal blood vessels
Abnormal glomeruli
Abnormal tubules
Define postrenal acute renal failure
Obstruction of the urinary collecting system. Anywhere from calyces to the ureter outflow.
Causes:
Kidney stones
What generally occurs in prerenal acute renal failure?
Decreased GFR
Decreased Urine output of water/solutes
Results in oliguria and can progress to anuria.
Note:
This simultaneously means water and solutes are building up in the body.
What are the main causes of prerenal acute renal failure?
Intravascular volume depletion (Hemorrhage, diarrhea/vomiting, burns)
Cardiac failure (MI, Valvular damage)
Peripheral vasodilation & resultant hypotension (anaphylactic shock, anesthesia, sepsis, primary renal hemodynamic abnormalities, renal artery stenosis, embolism, or thrombosis)
At what point does prerenal acute renal failure become irreversible?
When renal blood flow drops under 20-25%.
How do the kidneys compensate during decreased renal blood flow?
Decreased renal blood flow decreases GFR.
lower GFR = lower filtered sodium
Lower filtered sodium = less reabsorption of sodium (saving energy)
This means O2 requirements decrease, but the tubular epithelial cells can only survive in a hypoxic environment for so long.
What are the 3 categories of intrarenal acute renal failure?
- Conditions that injure the glomerular capillaries/small renal vessels.
- Conditions that damage the renal tubular epithelium.
- Conditions that damage the renal interstitium.
What are the primary causes of intrarenal acute renal failure?
Small vessel/glomerular injury
Tubular epithelial injury (Tubular necrosis)
Renal interstitial injury
What are the types of small vessel/glomerular injury diseases?
Vasculitis
Cholesterol emboli
Malignant hypertension
Acute glomerulonephritis
What is the common cause of glomerulonephritis?
Group A beta-hemolytic Strep
S. pyogenes is the most common.
What is the exact pathophys that causes glomerulonephritis? (Possible exam Q?)
The antibodies and antigens that react to S. pyogenes form a complex that gets stuck in basement membrane.
This causes the available membrane openings to become permeable to proteins and RBC, moving it into your filtrate.
Note:
The infection can occur elsewhere in the body 1-3 weeks prior, but the leftover antibodies and antigens are the issue. This makes it a type 3 hypersensitivity reaction, immune complex-mediated!