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Acute Renal Failure and PreRenal Azotemia

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Title: Acute Renal Failure and PreRenal Azotemia


1
Acute Renal Failure and Pre-Renal Azotemia
  • By
  • Cathy Kitchen
  • (senior lecturer,UCE)

2
Fluid management in HDU
3
DEFINITIONS OF DEHYDRATION
  • A reduction in the normal total body water
    (TBW) content, usually due to excessive fluid
    loss which is not balanced by appropriate
    increase in intake
  • (Youngston, 1999)

4
  • Distal Convoluted Tubule
  • Secretion of H ions. Adjust the pH of the soon
    to be urine.
  • Secretion is the process of taking waste
    substances from the body back to the filtrate.

5
Reflex response to renal hypo-perfusion
  •   1. Decreased GFR
  • ? azotemia
  • 2. Increased ADH (response to ? effective
    plasma volume)
  • ? water retention
  • 3. Na retention as follows
  •  
  • Increased renal renin release
  • ?
  • Angiotensin I production
  • ?
  • Angiotensin II production (there is ACE in the
    kidney)
  • Local effect Systemic effect
  • ? ?
  • Efferent arteriole construction ? aldosterone
  • ? ?
  • ? Filtration fraction ? distal Na
    absorption
  • ?
  • ? proximal Na absorption

6
Normal Fluid Distribution
7
Fluid calculation
  • Relationship between the volumes of major fluid
    compartments
  • (The values shown are calculated for a 70 kg
    man).
  • TBW 0.6 x Body weight

8
Body Fluid Movement
  • Fluid moves freely between compartments
  • 4 basic pressures control this via the capillary
    membrane (CM)
  • Capillary hydrostatic pressure (internal FP on
    CM)
  • Interstitial fluid pressure (external FP on CM)
  • Plasma osmotic pressure (fluid attracting
    pressure from protein concentration within
    capillary)
  • Interstitial osmotic pressure (fluid attracting
    pressure from protein concentration outside
    capillary)

9
Starlings Law of the Capillaries
  • Whether fluids leave (filtration) or enter
    (re-absorption) capillaries depends on how the
    pressures in the capillary and interstitial
    spaces relates to one another.
  • Volume re-absorbed is similar to volume filtered
    A net equilibrium
  • Regulates relative volumes of blood
    interstitial fluid.

10
DEFINITIONS OF ARF
  • The syndrome is characterised by a sudden in
    parenchymal function which is usually but not
    always reversible
  • This produces disturbance of water, electrolyte,
    acid base balance and nitrogenous waste products
    blood pressure.

11
Acute Renal Failure
  • Nephrologists Definition
  • Plasma creatinine gt 120 mmols
  • Creatinine clearance lt 70 mls/min

12
Other Definitions
  • Abrupt sustained decline in GFR
  • Rising serum urea and creatinine
  • Loss of water and salt homeostasis
  • Life threatening metabolic sequelae
  • Occurs over hours or days
  • 5 of all surgical and medical admissions

13
Cockcroft Gault equation
(140-age in years) x weight in kg serum
creatinine (µmol/L) (corrected for males x 1.23,
females x 1.04)
14
Types of Dehydration (1)
  • Isotonic (isonatraemic) dehydration
    proportional loss of Na and water (serum Na
    130-150 mmol/L)
  • Body fluid solute concentration osmolality are
    maintained
  • Fluid losses are largely confined to the
    extracellular compartment (ECC)

15
Types of Dehydration (2)
  • Hypotonic. (Hyponatraemic) dehydration
    disproportionate loss of Na over water (serum Na
    lt 130 mmol/L.)
  • Net fluid loss is hypertonic.
  • Water moves from the ECC to the ICC.
  • This leads to an increase in brain volume
    increased risk of convulsions, marked ECC loss
    leads to greater shock per unit of water loss

16
Deficit in ECC
  • Decreased H2O intake
  • Diarrhoea
  • Vomiting
  • Drain loss
  • Diabetes insipidus
  • Systemic infection
  • Renal disease
  • Adrenal insufficiency
  • Intestinal obstruction
  • Gastrointestinal suctioning
  • Blood loss
  • Diaphoresis
  • Burns
  • Diuretics
  • Diet low in Na

17
Clinical Manifestations
  • Acute weight loss
  • Oliguria or anuria
  • Dry mucous membranes skin
  • Hypotension
  • Decrease in pulse
  • Rapid deep respirations
  • Change in consciousness
  • confusion
  • restlessness
  • delirium
  • unconsciousness
  • convulsions

18
Significant Lab Findings
  • Haematocrit - elevated
  • Haemoglobin - elevated
  • RBC - elevated
  • Serum Na
  • Normal if deficit is due to loss of isotonic
    fluid (hypovolaemia)
  • Increased if deficit is due to severe and greater
    loss of water than Na (hypernatraemia)
  • Decreased if deficit is due to severe loss of Na
    (hyponatraemia)

19
Types of Dehydration (3)
  • Hypertonic (hypernatraemic) dehydration
    disproportionate loss of water over Na (serum Na
    gt 150 mmol/L.)
  • Net fluid loss is hypotonic insensible
    losses
  • Causes Fever or dry hot environment, excessive
    urinary loss (diabetes insipidus) or profuse, low
    Na diarrhoea

20
Impact of Hypernatraemic Dehydration
  • Extracellular fluid initially becomes hypertonic
    with respect to the intracellular fluid.
  • This leads to a shift of water from the ICC to
    the ECC.
  • Water is drawn out of the brain and cerebral
    shrinkage within a rigid skull may lead to small
    multiple haemorrhages and convulsions.

21
Excess in ECC
  • CHF
  • Hyperaldosteronism
  • Renal disease
  • Steroid therapy
  • Excessive intake of Na
  • without adequate H20 intake
  • Excessive intake of H20 without adequate Na intake
  • Excessive administration of isotonic solution of
    sodium chloride
  • Excess administration of sodium bicarbonate
  • Excess tap water enemas!!!!!!!
  • Excess H20 nasogastric irrigation!!

22
Clinical Manifestations
  • Acute weight gain
  • Oedema
  • Increase in pulse and BP
  • Increase in urine output
  • Rales (moist) in lungs
  • headache
  • Convulsions
  • Rapid deep respirations
  • Shortness of breath
  • Change in consciousness
  • confusion
  • restlessness
  • unconsciousness

23
Laboratory Findings
  • Haematocrit -decreased
  • Haemoglobin - decreased
  • RBC - decreased
  • Serum Urinary Na
  • Normal if excess due to Isotonic fluid overload
  • Increased if excess due to hypernatraemia
  • Decreased if excess due to hyponatraemia

24
Aetiology
  • Pre-renal ARF
  • Intrinsic ARF
  • Post-renal ARF

25
Pre-renal ARF
  • Reversible fall in GFR due to renal hypoperfusion
  • Hypovolaemia
  • Haemorrhage, burns, GI fluid loss, renal fluid
    loss
  • Hypotension
  • Cardiogenic shock, sepsis
  • Renal hypoperfusion
  • renal vasoconstriction, drugs, liver disease,
    renal vascular disease

26
Differential diagnosis
27
Acute renal failureUsing the urine
  • U/A blood/ protein
  • Urine Chemistry Na, K, urea,creatinine
  • Na marker for volume depletion
  • Creatinine Clearance UV/P can be estimated
    from spot sample 7 urine flow rate
  • 24 hr urine urea x 0.033 x 6.25 Protein
    catabolic Rate

28
PRE-RENAL AZOTEMIA
  •  
  • 1) ENHANCED FRACTIONAL TUBULAR NA REABSORPTION
  •  
  • 2) ENHANCED FRACTIONAL H20 REABSORPTION
  •  
  • 3) ENHANCED FRACTIONAL UREA REABSORPTION
  •  

29
ENHANCED Na REABSORPTION IN PRE-RENAL AZOTEMIA
  •  
  • A) STARLING FORCES
  •  
  • B) ANGIOTENSIN II
  •  
  • C) ALDOSTERONE
  •  
  • D) ADRENERGIC NERVOUS SYSTEM
  •  

30
BUN/ CREATININE RATIO IN PRE-PRENAL AZOTEMIA
  • A) ENHANCED H20 REABSORPTION WITH AN INCREASE IN
    UREA CONCENTRATION IN THE COLLECTING DUCT.
  •  
  • B) INCREASED VASOPRESSIN
  •  
  • RISE IN BUN WILL EXCEED THAT OF PLASMA CREATININE

31
Azotemia, Clinical Assessment
  • Is there renal disease?
  • Evaluate the following
  • Patient hydration
  • Serum creatinine
  • Urine specific gravity
  • Azotemia, dehydration, sp. gr. gt 1.030
    pre-renal
  • Azotemia, dehydration, sp. gr. lt 1.020 renal
  • Azotemia, normal hydration, sp. gr. lt 1.020
    renal
  • Azotemia, hyponatremia/hypochloremia normal
    renal compensation (TGF)

32
Acute Renal Failure features 1
  • Azotemia(Uraemia)
  • Non excretory morbidity renal effects
  • fluid balance
  • Na / K disturbance
  • acidosis
  • hypertension
  • anaemia
  • renal bone disorders

33
Acute Renal Failure features 2
  • (Uraemia)
  • Non excretory morbidity non-renal effects
  • Malnutrition
  • Bleeding tendency
  • Predisposition to Sepsis
  • Pericarditis
  • accelerated vascular disease cardiac,
  • stroke
  • endocrine dysfunction thyroid, gonadal,
  • Peptic ulceration

34
Fluid and Electrolyte Replacement
  • Getting the diagnosis right
  • Getting the Balance Right

35
Estimating fluid/electrical requirements
  • Separate consideration for
  • Maintenance requirements
  • Vary according to calorie expenditure (hence age,
    mass, body temp, level of activity, environmental
    temp humidity)
  • As opposed to deficit replacement
  • Directly related to function of body mass

36
Fluid resuscitation
  • Met-analysis of fluid resuscitation in Critical
    Care patients (Choi et al 1999 Alderson et al
    2002)
  • Insufficient evidence for fluid resuscitation in
    ARF patients (Ragaller et al 2001)
  • Volume versus type of replacement- no evidence to
    support improved survival according to type
    (Nolan 2001 Pulimood Park 2000))

37
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38
Aim of fluid therapy
  • Tissue perfusion and organ function
  • Targeted to a specific pre-load, stroke volume
    rather than MAP
  • CVP, PCWP- popular surrogate markers of pre-load
  • RCT Study- fluid challenge use of CVP monitor
    influenced the peri-operative
  • morbidity of patients with hip fractures
  • (Venn
    et al 2001)

39
Pathophysiology of ATN
  • NB. This is not completely understood
  • 60 of ARF cases
  • related events include-
  • induction by hypoxia of nitric oxide synthases
    with increased production of nitric oxide
  • vasoconstriction
  • liberation of toxic endothelial factors
  • tubular obstruction by desquamated cells and
    casts..

40
Chemical mediators of inflammation
  • Plasma-derived
  • Circulating precursors
  • Have to be activated
  • Cell-derived
  • sequestered intracellularly
  • synthesized de novo

41
Figure 2-9 Kumar p 34
42
Oxygen-derived free radicals
  • Oxygen-derived free radicals responsible for
    tissue injury
  • Direct injury to endothelial cells
  • Injury to extracellular matrix via activation of
    proteases
  • Injury to other cell types (e.g., RBCs, tumor
    cells)

43
Global Tissue Perfusion
  • Parameters
  • Lactate, PH, Base excess, SvO2
  • Can vary in sepsis
  • Gut mucosa- Gastric Tanometry can detect occult
    hypovolaemia (PCO2 is independent of cell
    metabolism PH )

44
Water Balance in Third spacing
  • Capillary Permeability -Third -Spacing period
  • Alteration of normal homeostasis, intravascular
    volume and cardiac output
  • 12 - 36 hours post burn fluid shifts from
    intravascular to interstitial space
  • Due to increased capillary permeability
  • Third spacing is most significant during first 12
    hours post burn injury

45
Fluid Shifts / Third Spacing (1)
  • Leakage of intravascular protein rich fluids,
    electrolytes and plasma
  • Degree of shift dependent upon severity of burn
  • lt15 burns only produce minor shifts
  • Vicious circle more proteins lost increases
    colloid osmotic pressure thus increasing the
    intravascular to interstitial fluid shift

46
Fluid Shifts / Third Spacing (2)
  • Fluid in the interstitial space and
    connective tissues between the cells
  • Leads to oedema
  • Then hypovolaemia SHOCK
  • Occult hypovolaemia- needs high index of
    suspicion subtle invasive monitoring

47
Acute Renal Failure
  • potentially reversible
  • delay may be critical treatment of the renal
    failure
  • management of the cause
  • often coexists with disease of other organs
  • renal vascular disease - vascular disease
    elsewhere
  • diabetes
  • nephritis - SLE/ drug allergy/ vasculitis
  • amyloid - myeloma

48
Renal Failure
  • Acute or chronic?
  • Acute rise in creatinine by gt30 may be ARF
  • potentially reversible
  • delay may be critical
  • eg Creat 129, 10 days later 176, rise 47 (36)
  • ARF until proven otherwise

49
Prevention
  • Identify at risk patients
  • pre-existing CRF, diabetes, jaundice, myeloma,
    elderly
  • Optimise renal perfusion
  • IV fluids, inotropes, central line
  • Maintain adequate diuresis
  • Mannitol, frusemide, NOT dopamine
  • Avoid nephrotoxic agents
  • ACE inhibitors, NSAIDS, radiological contrast,
    aminoglycosides

50
Acute Renal Failure What to do when youve got
it
  • Treat the uraemia
  • Treat the complications
  • Treat the underlying disease
  • Watch drug usage dosage
  • Anything to reduce the mortality

51
Acute Renal Failure Treat the uraemia
  • Conservative measures
  • Inform Renal unit now,
  • not when these measures have failed
  • Dialysis

52
Resuscitation
  • Recovery from ARF is first dependent upon
    restoration of RBF. Early RBF normalization
    predicts better prognosis for recovery of renal
    function. In prerenal failure, restoration of
    circulating blood volume is usually sufficient.
    Rapid relief of urinary obstruction in postrenal
    failure results in a prompt decrease of
    vasoconstriction. With intrinsic renal failure,
    removal of tubular toxins and initiation of
    therapy for glomerular diseases decreases renal
    afferent vasoconstriction

53
Calculation of Maintenance Fluids
  • Calculate for 24 hours
  • Multiply weight in kg. By appropriate number of
    mls for age
  • Add or subtract a volume according to any
    modifying factors present, including any abnormal
    continuing losses

54
Treatment Targets (1)
  • Hypovolaemia should be corrected promptly using
    plasma or blood to replace the circulating blood
    volume (2-4 hrs)
  • Measure CVP core peripheral temp
    differential.
  • Vasodilator drugs may be required to improve
    perfusion

55
Treatment Targets (2)
  • Restoration of urine flow should follow
    restoration of circulating blood volume
  • Delay may lead to further kidney damage with
    accompanying hyperkalaemia and metabolic
    acidosis.
  • Care is required to prevent fluid overload.

56
Treatment Targets (3)
  • Restoration of ECC fluid deficit and acid base
    status replacement of normal and/or ongoing
    loses (2-4 to 24 hrs)
  • Potassium replacement/maintenance
  • Complete correction of Na water deficits and
    restoration of potassium stores (24hrs to 2-4
    days) Additional caution with KCL replacement if
    renal function is impaired

57
Maintenance Requirements
58
Modifying Factors
59
Nursing Care
  • Hourly intake / output record
  • output lt1-2 ml/kg/hr
  • ? Catheterise for accuracy
  • ? Repeat samples for osmolality / SG
  • Monitor colour of urine
  • Assess systemic perfusion...

60
Fluids debate
  • A meta-analysis -looked at mortality in eight
    human trials in patients receiving 1) crystalloid
    or 2) colloid for resuscitation. It showed an
    overall 5.7 decrease in mortality rate in
    patients resuscitated with crystalloid rather
    than colloid solutions.
  • Subgroup analysis showed that trauma/sepsis
    patients had a 12.3 decrease in mortality when
    crystalloids were used. 
  • However, when crystalloids were used in patients
    undergoing elective surgery, there was a 7.8
    increase in mortality. The proposed explanation
    was that patients with trauma and sepsis have an
    increase in capillary permeability that allows
    the administered colloid to leak out of the
    vasculature, to be less effective as an
    intravascular volume expander and to slow
    resolution of oedema from the affected tissues.
  • (Valanovich, 1988)

61
Fluids debate
  • In patients undergoing elective procedures, the
    amount of capillary leak compared to major
    trauma, is more limited to the surgical site
    thus, the use of colloids may be more efficacious
    in increasing intravascular volume.
  • Most colloid advocates do not recommend these
    substances as the sole resuscitative fluid. The
    usual protocol involves initial infusion of
    crystalloids, followed by the administration of
    colloids when large volumes are necessary to
    reduce the amount of crystalloids.
  • In general, crystalloids need to be administered
    in volumes that are approximately 2-3 times that
    of iso-oncotic colloid to obtain the same
    haemodynamic effect.
  • Exception 25 albumin, this ratio is no longer
    valid.

62
Controversy of Albumin
  • Human albumin solution has been used in the
    treatment of critically ill patients for over 50
    years. Currently, the licensed indications for
    use of albumin are emergency treatment of shock,
    acute management of burns and clinical situations
    associated with hypo-proteinaemia.
  •  Our systematic review of randomised controlled
    trials showed that, for each of these patient
    categories, the risk of death in the
    albumin-treated group was higher than in the
    comparison group.
  • The pooled relative risk of death with albumin
    was 1.68 and the pooled difference in the risk of
    death was 6 or six additional deaths for every
    100 patients treated. We consider that use of
    human albumin solution in critically ill patients
    should be urgently reviewed.

63
Crystalloids
  • Slow restoration of circulatory vol.
  • Most common administration
  • 5 Dexlost rapidly from IVC( 660mls IC 130mls
    EC)
  • N/Sal 250mls intravasc. 750mls interstitial
  • Usually need larger vol.than colloids
  • Large vol. may initiate metabolic acidosis

64
Nursing Care (b)
  • Watch for hyponatraemia
  • change in consciousness
  • muscle cramps
  • anorexia
  • abnormal reflexes
  • Cheyne-stokes respiration
  • or seizures

65
Hyponatraemia
  • Clinical manifestations Change in consciousness
    seizures.
  • Usually only when plasma Na lt120 mmol/l, and the
    fall has been rapid
  • Causes Dilutional
  • Na wasting

66
Hyponatraemia Treatment
  • Hypertonic saline 3 NaCl (0.5 mmol/ml) Iv to
    increase plasma Na by 10 mmol/l
  • Dialysis or haemofiltration
  • Rate of correction rapid. Central pontine
    myelinosis rare / unheard of in children.

67
Nursing Considerations (3)
  • Potential metabolic acidosis related to-
  • Poor systemic perfusion associated with pre-renal
    failure
  • Decreased renal ability to excrete hydrogen ions

68
Acute Renal Failure K handling
  • Normal intake 80 150 mmol/day
  • Bleeding/? catabolism ? K release from
    tissues
  • Excretion renal 80
  • faeces 5-15
  • Handling adrenaline K ?muscle insulin K
    ?muscle
  • acidosis causes ? K
  • Filtration
  • if K 5 1 litre/hr removes 120 mmols K/
    day

69
Hyperkalaemia Emergent Care
  • Elimination of K
  • Calcium Resonium 0.5-1g/kg daily in divided doses
  • Diuretics e.g. Frusemide 2-10 mg/kg
  • Dialysis

70
Hyperkalaemia
  • Immediate action redistribution of K
    stabilization of membranes
  • Salbutamol 2.5-5mg by nebulizer
  • Ca gluconate 10 0.5 ml/kg over 2-4 mins
  • Bicarbonate 2 mmol/kg over 30 mins
  • Glucose insulin 0.5-1 g glucose/kg IV over
    15-30 mins, may add 0.5-1 u soluble insulin / 5g
    glucose

71
Hyperkalaemia Non-emergent Care
  • Dietary restriction of potassium
  • IV Fluids !!
  • Oral ion exchange resins (Ca resonium)

72
Distribution of body calcium
73
Nursing Care (c)
  • Watch for hypocalcaemia
  • muscle tingling or changes in muscle tone
  • Seizures
  • Tetany
  • ve Chvostek sign ( twitching of side of face
    when the facial nerve is tapped in front of the
    ear)
  • Drugs antacid phosphate binders Vit D

74
Hypocalcaemia Hyperphosphataemia
  • Hypocalcaemia usuually secondary to
    hyperphosphataemia
  • If symptomatic (tetany, muscle spasm of face,
    hands feet, hypotension, cardiac insufficiency)
    give IV Ca gluconate infusion
  • Oral phosphate binders e.g. aluminium hydroxide,
    Ca carbonate

75
Metabolic Acidosis
  • Bicarbonate therapy when pH lt 7.25 and
    bicarbonate lt 12 mmol/l
  • Dialysis

76
Is the patient?
  • Non-catabolic
  • Single system failure
  • Intermittent dialysis / no dialysis
  • Nutritional requirements not increased
  • Catabolic
  • Multi-organ failure
  • Continuous renal replacement therapy
  • Increased nitrogen requirements

77
Acute Renal failureRenal replacement Dialysis
or filtration
  • Haemodialysis simple (on renal unit)
  • rapid correction (eg K?, fluid)
  • disequilibrium, fluid ??
  • Haemofiltration (CVVH(/-D), CAVH(/-D)
  • smooth, good control of fluid
  • slowish, cant mobilise patient
  • Peritoneal Dialysis avoids heparin,
  • less haemodynamic disruption slow,
    may impair breathing, peritonitis,
    politically incorrect

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