Renal/urinary risk factors and complications Flashcards

1
Q

What are the risk factors for developing CKD?

A

Female gender

Old age (loss of kidney function)

All cardiovascular disease: HTN, atherosclerosis etc

Smoking

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2
Q

What are the complications of chronic kidney disease?

A

Chronic kidney disease - mineral bone disease (hypocalcaemia and hyperparathyroidism)

Renal anaemia

Metabolic acidosis (reduced bicarbonate production)

Hyperkalemia

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3
Q

What do ESRF CKD patients normally die from?

A

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

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4
Q

What are the risk factors for chronic kidney disease?

A
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
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5
Q

Why does anaemia occur in CKD?

A

Because of loss of EPO production!

Not because of haematuria!!!

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6
Q

Why might heart failure occur in CKD?

A

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.

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7
Q

Why does acidosis occur in renal failure?

A

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

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8
Q

Other than infection, what are the other major complication of immunosuppression in renal transplant patients?

A
  1. Malignancy:
    Risk is related to number of years of immunosuppression and age.
  2. Cardiovascular disease.
  3. Drug interactions with immunosuppression drugs, via P450 enzyme - higher effective immunosuppression, causing increased risk of infection, including things like St. John’s wort.
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9
Q

What are the complications of post-streptococcal glomerulonephritis?

A

Some children: have renal failure

25% adults: rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis

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10
Q

What are the RFs for bladder cancer?

A

Age
Smoking
Exposure to dye chemicals
Exposure to rubber chemicals

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