RENAL FAILURE Flashcards
What is a classic cardiac symptom of uremia? Treatment?
Pericarditis
dialysis
Explain the 3 broad causes of AKI
- Pre-renal: insufficient bloodflow to kidneys, causes - dehydration, shock, HF
- Intrinsic: renal dysfunction, causes - acute tubular necrosis, glomerulonephritis
- Post-renal: bilateral obstruction causes - stones, prostate, congenital anomalies
What is the basic work up for AKI? Five points
- Urine dip
- Ultrasound
- History: drugs, comorbidities, hydration
- Exam: BP, dehydration, HF
- Urea and electrolytes
How do you expect urea and creatinine to change in pre-renal failure? Explain
Both rise but urea will rise more than creatinine
Reason for this is the kidneys are resorbing water (due to low perfusion) this drags urea along with it
How does creatinine and urea rise in AKI with intrinsic cause? Explain
Both rise and ratio stays the same
This is because there is no resorption of water drawing in urea
Anuria is a key feature of which type of renal failure? What is the investigation of choice in these patients?
Post renal failure
Ultrasound will show hydronephrosis
What are the two most common causes of chronic kidney disease?
Diabetes, hypertension
What is the EGFR of end-stage kidney disease (stage five)?
<15 mL/min
What are the five main indications for dialysis?
- Acidaemia
- Electrolyte imbalance (hyperkalamia)
- Intoxication (overdose or dialysable substances e.g. aspirin)
- Overload of fluid (HF)
- Ureamic symptoms
What are the three main types of dialysis? Briefly describe each one
- Haemodialysis: requires vascular access, blood pumped from body filtered, brought back into body, done in sessions
- Peritoneal dialysis: fluid cycle through peritoneal cavity, daily
- Haemofiltration: constant filtering of blood, done at bedside for critically ill patients
Why are fistulas preferred over Central line access for dialysis?
Lower rates of thrombosis and infection comparatively
Explain how kidney disease causes secondary hyperparathyroidism
- High phosphate pulls calcium out of plasma
- Low vitamin D → low calcium absorption from gut
Untreated hyperparathyroidism in renal disease can lead to which bone condition? How can this be prevented?
Renal osteodystrophy → bone pain and fractures
prevention: phosphate binders e.g. calcium carbonate, sevelamer
Why do people with uremia have a higher tendency to bleed?
Uremia causes platelet dysfunction, believed to be due to decreased platelet aggregation and abnormal adhesiveness