Renal/urinary risk factors and complications Flashcards
What are the risk factors for developing CKD?
Female gender
Old age (loss of kidney function)
All cardiovascular disease: HTN, atherosclerosis etc
Smoking
What are the complications of chronic kidney disease?
Chronic kidney disease - mineral bone disease (hypocalcaemia and hyperparathyroidism)
Renal anaemia
Metabolic acidosis (reduced bicarbonate production)
Hyperkalemia
What do ESRF CKD patients normally die from?
In short: haemodialysis causes haemodynamic stresses that accelerate development of heart failure and dilated cardiomyopathy.
Cardiovascular complications (not renal failure since they can have dialysis)
Most commonly - sudden cardiac death in haemodialysis patients
“Unexpected cardiac death within 1 hr of symptom onset, in a person without a prior condition that would appear fatal”
This is due to a milieu of metabolic/pathophysiological factors:
Myocardial fibrosis
Vascular calcification
Autonomic dysfunction
What are the risk factors for chronic kidney disease?
Old age Family hx of CKD Reduced kidney mass - injury to one kidney Low birth weight Southeast Asian
Conditions: DM HTN Autoimmune disease Systemic sepsis UTI Renal stones Urinary obstruction Drug toxicity
Why does anaemia occur in CKD?
Because of loss of EPO production!
Not because of haematuria!!!
Why might heart failure occur in CKD?
Due to any of the pathological causes of CKD, but most likely due to hypertension and fluid overload due to: reduced glomerular filtration rate (less water out, and more salt left in) as the kidney function declines.
Increased preload and afterload making the heart work harder.
Why does acidosis occur in renal failure?
Reduced acid secretion and excretion
Reduced bicarbonate production and reabsorption
Increased protein metabolism creating organic acids (sulphuric, nitric etc) - this is due to lots of reasons (general increased state of catabolism) but can also be due to diabetes: a major cause of renal failure
Other than infection, what are the other major complication of immunosuppression in renal transplant patients?
- Malignancy:
Risk is related to number of years of immunosuppression and age. - Cardiovascular disease.
- Drug interactions with immunosuppression drugs, via P450 enzyme - higher effective immunosuppression, causing increased risk of infection, including things like St. John’s wort.
What are the complications of post-streptococcal glomerulonephritis?
Some children: have renal failure
25% adults: rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis
What are the RFs for bladder cancer?
Age
Smoking
Exposure to dye chemicals
Exposure to rubber chemicals