Poor Urinary Output Flashcards
What is the normal urine output
1/ml/kg/hr
What is oliguria and anuria
Oliguria - reduced output = <400ml/day (<0.5ml/kg/hour)
Anuria - complete absence of output
Why is anuria important
May be the first and only sign of acute renal failure
=> Death due to hyperkalaemia, profound acidosis, pulmonary oedema
What are the most common causes for reduced urinary output
Hypovolaemia (dehydration, haemorrhage) Hypotension (sepsis, pancreatitis) Acute tubular necrosis BPH Blocker catheter
What are the pre-renal causes of reduced urinary output
Hypovolaemia (dehydration, haemorrhage)
Hypotension (sepsis, pancreatitis)
Heart failure
Reduced local perfusion of kidneys
What are the renal causes of reduced urinary output
Acute tubular necrosis
Glomerulonephritis
Interstitial nephritis (NSAIDs, antibiotics)
Vascular (vasculitides, HUS, TTP, DIC, malignancy hypertension, scleroderma)
Infection (malaria, legionnaire’s, leptospirosis)
Multiple myeloma
What are the post-renal causes of reduced urinary output
Abdominal/pelvic mass compressing ureters Complication of surgery Bilateral calculi Retroperitoneal fibrosis Neuropathic bladder Drugs (anticholinergics, sympathomimetics) Bladder stones or tumour Uterovaginal prolapse BPH Blocked catheter Prostate cancer Urethral stricture Trauma Infection
What is the required fluid intake for adults of average size
3L per 24 hours
Febrile - 500mL for every degree above 37
Which drugs are nephrotoxic
NSAIDs
ACEi
Diuretics
Antibiotics - gentamycin, vancomycin
What should be looked for in an inpatients notes if they have reduced urinary output
Fluid balance chart Surgical operative notes Drug charts Bloods: haemoglobin and renal function Past medical history
What should be looked for on examination of a patient with reduced urinary output
Catheterised => check the catheter bag for urine output and any blood + colour
Signs of dehydration: dry lipids mouth and tongue.
Tachycardia, narrow pulse pressure, hypotension, prolonged CRT (>2s), cool peripheries
Ask patient if they feel dizzy on standing
Fluid overload - signs of heart failure (Raised JVP, ascites, peripheral oedema, hepatosplenomegaly, basal lung creps, S3, displaced apex beat
Urinary retention signs: palpable, distended bladder, dull to percussion
Typical presentation for a patient with cauda equina syndrome
Lower back pain Urinary retention Lower motor neuron signs affecting the lower limbs Peri-anal numbness Lax anal tone
Management for cauda equina syndrome
Urgent MRI spine
If confirmed - urgent surgical intervention to decompress the affected roots
What are the main complications of urethral bladder catheterisation
UTI (esp. Proteus mirabilis)
Urethral trauma ± creation of a false passage
Urethral scarring + stricture
Bladder perforation
What are the main complications of chronic urinary retention
Urinary incontinence due to overflow
UTI due to stasis
Bladder stones due to stasis
Hydroureters and hydronephrosis
Renal failure
Acute-on-chronic urinary retention (painful)
Bladder wall hypertrophy and outpouchings