Title: Introduction%20to%20Renal%20Failure%20and%20Acute%20Renal%20Failure
1Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal
Failure
- Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO
- University of New England
- Physician Assistant Program
- 20-27 JAN 20010
2Contact Information
- Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO
- Jeffrey.T.Reisert_at_Hitchcock.org
- 103 Boulder Point Rd., Suite 3
- Plymouth, NH 03264
- 603-536-6355
- 603-536-6356 (fax)
3Genitourinary Section-Part 1
- Male urogenital disorders/Impotence
- Nephrolithiasis
- Urinary Tract Infections
4Genitourinary Section-Part 2
- Introduction to Renal Failure
- Acute Renal Failure
- Chronic Renal Failure
- Glomerulopathies (builds on prior topics)
- Tubular disorders (builds on prior topics)
- Hematuria
- Proteinuria
5Introduction
- Two syndromes of renal failure
- Acute
- Chronic
- Diagnosis-2 Patterns
- Clinical suspect with signs and symptoms
- Found incidentally on lab screen (serum or urine)
6Agenda
- General evaluation of renal failure
- Definitions
- Acute Renal Failure (ARF)
- Etiology
- Diagnosis/Evaluation
- Treatment
- Chronic Renal Failure (CRF)
- Pathogenesis
- Complications
- Treatment of the complications
7Definition-Renal failure
- Spectrum of disease with declining kidney
function - Decreased glomerular filtration rate
- Resultant increase in nitrogenous waste products
in the blood (azotemia) - Alteration in fluid an electrolytes
8Definitions-Part II
- OliguriaUrine output (UOP) of less than 400 or
500 cc/24 hours - AnuriaNo UOP
- Uremia
- Decreased renal function
- Azotemia
- Symptoms
9Definitions-Part III
- Polyuria
- Excessive or frequent urination
- Excessive water intake
- Medical conditions?
- Diabetes insipidus (Inability to concentrate
urine) - Renal disease
- Hematuria-blood in urine
- Proteinuria-protein in urine
10Assessment
- Labs
- Urine
- Serum
- Radiographic
11Assessment-Labs I
- Blood urea nitrogen-BUN
- Creatinine
- BUN/Creatinine ratio
- gt40 in prerenal azotemia
- lt20 in intrinsic renal failure
- Electrolytes
- Potassium especially!
12Creatinine
- Goes up quickly in ARF due to ischemia and radio
contrast (complication of x-ray dye studies such
as IVP, CT scans) - Peaks 3-5d after contrast
- Peaks 7-10d after ischemia
- Not correlative with symptoms
13Electrolytes
- Sodium reflects volume status
- Potassium, phosphate, and uric acid increase
14Assessment-Labs II
- Urine output (UOP)-Monitor Is and Os
- Urine sodium (reflects concentrating ability of
kidneys) - Body weight
- Toxin levels (i.e. CPK-MM fraction in
rhabdomyolysis)
15Glomerular filtration rate
- Collectively, the measure of renal function
- If low, leads to azotemia
- Can be estimated by serum creatinine
- Affected by age, sex, weight, fluid status, and
medical condition (illnesses, nutritional status,
drugs on board, etc.) - Creatinine used as a surrogate marker as levels
vary little day-to-day. - Creatinine is secreted in the proximal tubule
16Assessment-Labs III
- Creatinine clearance
- ml/min/1.73 per square meter
- Reflects the glomerular filtration rate
- Normal 85-125
- Lower in premies
- Measured or Calculated methods (next slides)
17Creatinine Clearance
- (Urine volume (ml/min) x Urine Creatinine)
- Divided by Serum Creatinine x
- 1.73/Body Surface Area
- -Involves 24 hour urine test mated with serum
creatinine - -Fairly accurate and easy
- -Once a year?
- Can be measured accurately by inulin (Usually in
research)..Is filtered but not reabsorbed or
secreted in the renal tubules. - Also by radionuclide markers such as I125
iothalamate or EDTA (uncommon use) because
18Creatinine Clearance Estimates
- Cockcroft-Gault equation
- Men(140-age) x (wt in kg) divided by 72 x serum
creatine - For women multiply by 85 to account for smaller
muscle mass (0.85 of mens estimate) - Use in hospitals with IV antibiotic dosing
19Assessment-Labs III
- Fractional excretion of Na
- (Urinary Na x Plasma Creatinine x 100) divided
by (Plasma Na x Urinary Creatinine)
20Azotemia
- Defined as excess of urea and nitrogenous
compounds in blood - Due to breakdown of protein
- (Metabolism of carbohydrates and fats yields
water and CO2) - If symptoms, use term uremia
21Assessment-Radiographic
- Ultrasound
- Excludes obstruction
- ?Small kidneys---gtCRF
- Advantages
- Non invasive
- No risky contrast dye
- Readily available
22Assessment-Radiographic II
- Plain x-Ray
- Flat plate (?stone)
- Pyelogram-Inject a dye, cleared through kidney
- Retrograde pyelogram-Inject dye inside urinary
collection system (intravesicular, using
cystoscope) - CT
- Probably better but dye risk in face of rising
creatinine - MRI
23Assessment-Wrap up
- Avoid contrast in ARF or CRF not on dialysis
- Biopsy may be needed in ARF for intrinsic disease
- Ultrasound is easy and helpful
24Complications of ARF
- Volume overload
- Decreased sodium and water excretion
- Resultant weight gain, heart failure, and edema
- Hyponatremia
- Hypocalcemia
- Paresthesias, cramps, seizures, confusion
25Complications of ARF II
- Hyperkalemia, phosphatemia, magnesemia
- Potassium increases 0.5mmol/l/d in uremia
- Treat hyperphosphatemia with calcium or aluminum
- Metabolic acidosis
- Hypertension (Moreso in CRF)
26General treatment of ARF
- Prevention!!! (Avoid nephrotoxins, diabetes
control, etc.) - Reverse poisons (ETOH in ethylene glycol,
bicarbonate in acidosis) - Restore fluid volume and electrolyte balance
(Saline/crystalloids, colloids, blood) - Dialysis when needed (Acute if responsive (i.e.
dialyzable toxin) or in CRF) - Relieve obstruction (Easiest way to fix ARF!)
27Acute renal failure
- Definitions
- Classifications/Types
- Treatment
28Defined
- Renal failure of recent onset (hours to days to
weeks) - Typically little symptoms
- Can be found on random lab test or when suspect
- If acute obstruction, symptoms (below)
29Classification
- Prerenal renal failure (Renal hypoperfusion)-55
- Renal/Parenchymal/Intrinsic-45
- Post renal (Obstructive)-5
30Outcome
- Usually reversible
- Can recover even if almost no function
- Nephrology opinion?
31Prerenal azotemia
- Due to renal hypoperfusion
- Usually reversible if restoring renal blood flow
(RBF) - Parenchyma usually not damaged
- In severe cases, ischemia/injury
32Etiology
- Hypovolemia
- Fluid loss
- Decreased cardiac output
- Decreased systemic vascular resistance
- Renal hypoperfusion
- See next slides
33Fluid or blood loss
- Dehydration
- GI bleeds
- Burns
- Osmotic diuresis (i.e. diabetes)
- Sequestration (i.e. pancreatitis)
34Decreased Cardiac Output
- Acute MI
- CHF (perhaps most common among hospital patients)
- Arrhythmias
- Pulmonary embolism (PE)
- Mechanical ventilator
35Altered systemic vascular resistance
- Sepsis, antihypertensives, anesthetics,
anaphylaxis
36Hypovolemia
- Leads to epinephrine release and subsequent
vasoconstriction - Also activations of renin angiotensin
system--gtVasoconstriction - Release of arginine vasopressin (AVP)
37Renal hypoperfusion
- Renal vasoconstriction due to epinephrine
- ACE inhibitors
- Cyclooxygenase inhibitors (i.e. NSAIDs)-Also
lead to volume depletion - Hyperviscosity syndromes
38Hepatorenal syndrome
- Cirrhosis leads to intrarenal vasoconstriction
- Sodium retention
- Precipitated by bleeding, paracentesis,
diuretics, vasodilation, cyclooxygenase inhibitors
39Prerenal azotemia-Assessment
- Symptoms
- Thirst, dizzy
- Signs
- Low blood pressure, tachycardia, orthostasis
- Low UOP
40Lab evaluation
- Urine volume
- Urine microscopy
- Hyaline/bland casts due to concentrated urine
41Intrinsic renal failure
- Renovascular obstruction-Large vessel disease
- Glomerular or microvascular diseases
42Renovascular obstruction
- Obstructed renal artery (Atherosclerosis,
thrombus) - Renal vein obstruction (Thrombosis, external
compression)
43Glomerular diseases
- Glomerulonephritis
- Vasculitis
- Acute tubular necrosis
- Ischemic or nephrotoxic
- Interstitial nephritis
- Renal allograft rejection
- Will expand in later section
44Vasculitis
- Kidneys are one of several very vascular organs
- Hemolytic uremic syndrome
- Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura
- Disseminated intravascular coagulation
- Toxemia
- Accelerated HTN
- Lupus
- ?Include sickle cell disease
45Acute tubular necrosis
- Most susceptible area of the nephron to ischemia
is the renal tubule - Ischemia from prerenal azotemia (Most common)
- Prerenal azotemia is the most common cause of
intrinsic renal failure - Toxin induced
- Often see casts (covered later)
46Ischemia
- Hypoperfusion
- Resultant injury or ischemia
- Cortical necrosis
- Either recover (tubules regenerate) or develop
irreversible failure
47Nephrotoxins
- Radiocontrast (Intrarenal vasoconstriction)
- Aminoglycosides (Decrease GFR)
- Cyclosporin
- Chemotherapy (Cisplatin)
- Solvents (ethylene glycol)
- Others
48Endogenous nephrotoxins
- Rhabdomyolysis (Due to crush, injury, ETOH)
- Hemolysis (toxic to renal tubule)
- Uric acid (Same thing that causes gout)
- Myeloma (Plasma cell malignancy)
- Hypercalcemia (Causes renal vasoconstriction)
49Interstitial Nephritis
- Allergic (Antibiotics such as beta-lactams),
NSAIDs, diuretics - Infection (Bacterial-pyelonephritis, viral-CMV,
Fungus-Candidiasis) - Infiltration (Lymphoma, leukemia, sarcoidosis)
- Idiopathic
50Intrinsic renal failure
- Symptoms-Often none
- May have history of nephrotoxin exposure
- Signs-Azotemia on lab testing
- Nephritic syndrome (Oliguria, edema, HTN, Urine
sediment) - This suggests a glomerulonephritis or vasculitis
51Intrinsic renal failure-Lab evaluation
- Microscopy
- Muddy brown casts (ischemia and nephrotoxic)
- Red cell casts (acute glomerular injury or
nephritis) - White cell casts (interstitial nephritis)
- Eosinophilic casts (allergic nephritis)
- Often no casts
- Hematuria
52Intrinsic renal failure-Lab evaluation
- Proteinuria due to impaired reabsorption at the
proximal tubules - Guided by etiology (i.e. sedimentation rate if
vasculitis)
53Intrinsic renal failure-Treatment
- Treat cause
- Remove insult
- Support, hope, and pray
54Examples
- Glucocorticoids in vasculitis and allergic
interstitial nephritis) - Control blood pressure
55Postrenal renal failure
- Urinary outflow obstruction
- Single kidney or urethral obstruction--gtAnuria
56Etiologies of postrenal azotemia
- Prostate disease
- Neurogenic bladder
- I.e. spinal cord injuries
- Anticholinergics
- Blood clots
- Stones
- Tumor or other extrarenal obstruction
57Postrenal signs and symptoms
- Bladder distension
- Abdominal pain-colic
- Renal distension (ultrasound)
- History of risk factors (prostate disease,
stones, etc.)
58Treatment of obstruction
- Urologist
- Fix plumbing
- May need nephrostomy tube or suprapubic catheter
placed
59Miscellaneous treatment wrap-up
- Loop diuretics may restore diuresis
- Dopamine may promote sodium and water excretion
- Dialysis when needed
60Wrap-up II--Dialysis Use
- ?BUN gt 100
- Uremia
- Hypervolemia
- Hyperkalemia
- Acidosis
- Toxins
- Multiple
- Include digoxin, others
61More
- to come in next slide set