OnlineMedEd: Intern Content - "Renal Failure" Flashcards
Review the causes of prerenal AKI.
- Cardiogenic: MI or CHF leads to heart not pumping enough blood
- Intravascular volume depletion: dehydration, diarrhea, vomiting, hemorrhage
- Interstitial losses (“3rd spacing”): cirrhosis, nephrosis, gastrosis
- Blockage: atherosclerotic occlusion of the renal vessels, thrombosis, or fibromuscular dysplasia
Review the causes of postrenal AKI.
- Kidney, ureter, and bladder: cancer, stones, ureteropelvic junction abnormalities (congenital)
- Prostate: BPH, cancer
How can a urinalysis tell you what the cause of intrinsic renal failure is?
- Glomerulonephritis: RBC casts
- ATN: muddy casts
- AIN: eosinophils, WBC casts, WBCs
Describe the three phases of acute tubular necrosis.
- Initial phase: anuric, this is when the insult happens
- Maintenance phase: oliguric, metabolic derangements secondary to decreased GFR (e.g., hyperkalemia)
- Recovery phase: polyuric, low levels of all electrolytes (hyponatremia, hypokalemia, hypomagnesemia, and hypocalcemia)
Remember the Sketchy scene:
- on left, the kid has a malfunctioning water gun (anuric);
- in the middle, the Grounds FIlter is broken and the coffee machine is barely working;
- on the right, the trashcan has spilled over and knocked the sodium, calcium, bananas, and magnesium on the floor and they’re getting sprayed by the water
List the two ratios that suggest prerenal disease.
- BUN:Cr > 20
* FeNa < 1%
What is “the big mistake” that people make when managing prerenal AKI?
They jump to give fluids. This is wrong because if a person has prerenal AKI secondary to CHF, then diuresis is the correct treatment.
Lots of sodium flow through the nephron does what to renin?
It turns it off.
FeNa can be confounded by ________________.
any use of diuretic (loop, DCT, or collecting duct agents)
Also, it is only useful in those with oliguria.
Because the FeNa and BUN:Cr ratios are subject to confounding, the best way to handle suspected prerenal azotemia is _______________.
to give fluids and recheck a BMP (in a dehydrated person) or to give diuresis and recheck a BMP (in a volume-overloaded person)
How should you diagnose intrinsic renal failure?
Officially, a biopsy is needed. However, history and physical can usually get you there:
- Does the person have diabetes? Probably diabetic nephropathy.
- Does the person have lupus? Probably lupus nephritis.
- Does the person have HBV or HCV? Probably MPGN.