Presentation of Diseases of the Kidneys and Urinary Tract Flashcards
What can the urinary tract be divided into?
- Upper urinary tract
- Kidneys
- Parenchyma
- Pelvi-calyceal system
- Ureters
- Pelvi-ureteric junction
- Ureter
- Vesico-ureteric junction
- Kidneys
- Lower urinary tract
- Bladder
- Bladder outflow tract
- Bladder neck (intrinsic urethral sphincter)
- Prostate
- External urethral sphincter/pelvic floor
- Urethra
- Urethral meatus
- Foreskin
What is the upper urinary tract composed of?
- Kidneys
- Parenchyma
- Pelvi-calyceal system
- Ureters
- Pelvi-ureteric junction
- Ureter
- Vesico-ureteric junction
What is the lower urinary tract composed of?
- Bladder
- Bladder outflow tract
- Bladder neck (intrinsic urethral sphincter)
- Prostate
- External urethral sphincter/pelvic floor
- Urethra
- Urethral meatus
- Foreskin
What structures form the bladder outflow tract of the lower urinary tract?
- Bladder neck (intrinsic urethral sphincter)
- Prostate
- External urethral sphincter/pelvic floor
- Urethra
- Urethral meatus
- Foreskin
What are some different classifications of diseases in general?
- Infection
- Inflammation
- Iatrogenic
- Neoplasia
- Trauma
- Degenerative
- Congenital
- Genetic/hereditary
- Vascular
- Endocrine
- Failure
- Idiopathic
What are the typical different classifications of kidney disease?
- Infection
- Pyelonephritis
- Inflammation
- Glomerulonephritis, tubulointerstitial nephritis
- Iatrogenic
- Nephrotoxicity, PCNL
- Neoplasia
- Renal tumours, collecting system tumours
- Trauma
- Blunt trauma
- Vascular
- Atherosclerosis, hypertension, diabetes
- Hereditary
- Polycystic kidney disease, nephrotic syndrome
What is the typical presentation of kidney disease?
- Pain
- Pyrexia
- Haematuria
- 2 types, microscopic and macroscopic
- Proteinuria (presence of excess proteins in the urine)
- Pyuria (presence of pus in urine)
- Mass on palpation
Renal failure
What is the medical term for blood in the urine?
Haematuria
What is the medical term for the presence of pus in the urine?
Pyuria
What are the 2 types of haematuria?
Microscopic
Macroscopic
What are some different urine output definitions?
Oliguria = urine output <0.5ml/kg/hour
Anuria = two different kinds, absolute anuria (no urine output) or relative anuria (<100ml/24 hours)
Polyuria = urine out > 3L/24 hours
Nocturia = waking up at night 1 or more times to micturate
Nocturnal polyuria = nocturnal urine output > 1/3 of total urine output in 24 hours
What is oliguria?
Oliguria = urine output <0.5ml/kg/hour
What is anuria?
Anuria = two different kinds, absolute anuria (no urine output) or relative anuria (<100ml/24 hours)
What are the 2 different kinds of anuria?
Absolute anuria
Relative anuria
What is polyuria?
Polyuria = urine out > 3L/24 hours
What is nocturia?
Nocturia = waking up at night 1 or more times to micturate
What is nocturnal polyuria?
Nocturnal polyuria = nocturnal urine output > 1/3 of total urine output in 24 hours
How many stages of acute kidney injury (AKI) is there?
5
What does AKI stand for?
Acute kidney injury
What are the different stages of acute kidney injury?
- Stage 1
- Risk
- Increase in serum creatinine level (1.5x) or decrease in GFR by 25% or UO <0.5ml/kg/h for 6 hours
- Stage 2
- Injury
- Increase in serum creatinine level (2x) or decrease in GFR by 50% of UO <0.5ml/kg/h for 12 hours
- Stage 3
- Failure
- Increase in serum creatinine level (3x) or decrease in GFR by 75% or serum creatinine level > 355umol/L with acute increase of >44umol/L or UO <0.3ml/kg/h for 24 hours or anuria for 12 hours
- Stage 4
- Loss
- Persistent ARF or complete loss of kidney function > 4 weeks
- Stage 5
- End-stage kidney disease
- Complete loss of kidney function > 3 months
What is stage 1 acute kidney injury?
- Risk
- Increase in serum creatinine level (1.5x) or decrease in GFR by 25% or UO <0.5ml/kg/h for 6 hours
What is stage 2 acute kidney injury?
- Injury
- Increase in serum creatinine level (2x) or decrease in GFR by 50% of UO <0.5ml/kg/h for 12 hours
What is stage 3 acute kidney injury?
- Failure
- Increase in serum creatinine level (3x) or decrease in GFR by 75% or serum creatinine level > 355umol/L with acute increase of >44umol/L or UO <0.3ml/kg/h for 24 hours or anuria for 12 hours
What is stage 4 acute kidney injury?
- Loss
- Persistent ARF or complete loss of kidney function > 4 weeks
What is stage 5 acute kidney injury?
- End-stage kidney disease
- Complete loss of kidney function > 3 months
What is stage 5 acute kidney injury also known as?
End-stage kidney disease
What are some functions of the kidneys?
- Endocrine functions
- Erythropoietin
- Vitamin D metabolism
- Renin
- Excretory function
- Physiological waste (especially urea)
- Drugs
- Regulation of vascular tone
- Regulation of blood pressure
- Acid-base homeostasis
- Excrete H
- Generate bicarbonate
- Electrolyte homeostasis
- Na
- K
- Cl
- Body fluid homeostasis
- Fluid overload (peripheral oedema, congestive cardiac failure, pulmonary oedema)
What is the presentation of chronic renal failure?
- Asymptomatic
- Fatigue
- Anaemia
- Oedema
- Hypertension
- Bone pain due to renal bone disease
- Pruritis (in advanced renal failure)
- Nausea/vomiting (in advanced renal failure)
- Dyspnoea (in advanced renal failure)
- Pericarditis (in advanced renal failure)
- Neuropathy (in advanced renal failure)
- Coma (untreated advanced renal failure)
What are some different classifications of ureteric diseases?
- Infection
- Urethritis
- Iatrogenic/trauma
- Inadvertently cut or tied during hyperectomy or colon resection
- Neoplasia
- TCC of ureter
- TCC of bladder obstruction VUJ
- Prostate cancer obstructive VOJ
- Pelvic malignancy
- Pelvic or para-aortic lymphadenopathy
- Hereditary
- PUJ obstruction
- VUJ reflux
- Obstruction
- Intra-liminal (stone, blood clot)
- Intra-mural (scar tissue, TCC)
- Extra-luminal (pelvic mass, lymph nodes)
What are some different exampls of ureteric diseases?
- Infection
- Urethritis
- Iatrogenic/trauma
- Inadvertently cut or tied during hyperectomy or colon resection
- Neoplasia
- TCC of ureter
- TCC of bladder obstruction VUJ
- Prostate cancer obstructive VOJ
- Pelvic malignancy
- Pelvic or para-aortic lymphadenopathy
- Hereditary
- PUJ obstruction
- VUJ reflux
- Obstruction
- Intra-liminal (stone, blood clot)
- Intra-mural (scar tissue, TCC)
- Extra-luminal (pelvic mass, lymph nodes)
What are some different examples of renal diseases?
- Infection
- Pyelonephritis
- Inflammation
- Glomerulonephritis, tubulointerstitial nephritis
- Iatrogenic
- Nephrotoxicity, PCNL
- Neoplasia
- Renal tumours, collecting system tumours
- Trauma
- Blunt trauma
- Vascular
- Atherosclerosis, hypertension, diabetes
- Hereditary
- Polycystic kidney disease, nephrotic syndrome
What is the presentation of ureteric diseases?
- Pain
- Pyrexia
- Haematuria
- Palpable mass
- Renal failure (only if bilateral obstruction or single functioning kidney)
When can ureteric diseases cause renal failure?
Only if bilateral obstruction or single functioning kidney
What are the different classifications of bladder diseases?
- Infection
- Cystitis
- Inflammation
- Interstitial cystitis
- Colon diverticulitis resulting in colo-vesical fistula
- Iatrogenic/trauma
- Bladder rupture
- Bladder injury from hyperectomy (resulting in vesico-vaginal fistula)
- Neoplasia
- TCC of bladder
- Squamous cell carcinoma of blader
- Idiopathic
- Overreactive bladder syndrome
- Degenerative
- Chronic urinary retention
- Neurological
- Neurogenic bladder dysfunction
What are some examples of bladder diseases?
- Infection
- Cystitis
- Inflammation
- Interstitial cystitis
- Colon diverticulitis resulting in colo-vesical fistula
- Iatrogenic/trauma
- Bladder rupture
- Bladder injury from hyperectomy (resulting in vesico-vaginal fistula)
- Neoplasia
- TCC of bladder
- Squamous cell carcinoma of blader
- Idiopathic
- Overreactive bladder syndrome
- Degenerative
- Chronic urinary retention
- Neurological
- Neurogenic bladder dysfunction