Top Banner
Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice Robin Jeffrey Bradford Hospitals
47

Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

Jan 23, 2016

Download

Documents

masako

Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice. Robin Jeffrey Bradford Hospitals. Progressive and irreversible deterioration in glomerular +/- tubular function measured over months and years. Pyramid of chronic renal disease. 600/M. >5000/M. Measurement of renal function. Glomerular function - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

Robin Jeffrey

Bradford Hospitals

Page 2: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

Progressive and irreversible deterioration in glomerular +/- tubular function measured over

months and years

Page 3: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

Pyramid of chronic renal disease

600/M

>5000/M

Page 4: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

Measurement of renal function

• Glomerular function– Inulin clearance, radio-isotopic clearance– Creatinine clearance, Cockcroft-Gault– Serum creatinine, serum urea

Page 5: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

• Tubular function– Serum K, PO4, urate, – Acid-base balance

• Endocrine function– Haemoglobin– Serum calcium, PO4, PTH

Page 6: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

time

GFR

Page 7: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

Cockcroft-Gault formula

• Calculated Crcl

= (140-age) x weight x 1.2

serum creatinine

Page 8: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

example

• 70 year old woman• Weight 45kg• Crcl 25ml.min• Serum creatinine

132umol/l

• 25 year old male• Weight 85kg• Crcl 25ml/min• Serum creatinine

469umol/l

Page 9: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

Urea as a marker of renal function

Elevated by• Dehydration• Increased dietary

protein inc. gut bleed• Catabolic states inc.

infection and steroids

Reduced by• Overhydration• Starvation• Liver disease• pregnancy

Page 10: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice
Page 11: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

x x

xGFR

time

Page 12: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice
Page 13: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice
Page 14: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice
Page 15: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice
Page 16: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice
Page 17: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice
Page 18: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice
Page 19: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

Who gets renal disease

• Elderly

• Males

• Ethnic minorities

Page 20: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice
Page 21: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

Progression of CRF

• Continuation of primary disease process

• Factors associated with acute reversible deterioration

• Background irreversible progression

Page 22: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

dehydrationand reduced renal perfusion obstruction

infection

toxins

hypercalcaemia

Acute insult

Page 23: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

Background progression

• Adaptive hyperfiltration hypothesis

• Hypertension

• Proteinuria

• Tubulo-interstitial nephritis

• Hyperlipidaemia

• Cytokines

• Genetic factors

Page 24: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

Glomerular maladaptation

Increased intraglomerular pressure

Glomerular hypertrophy

Glomerulosclerosis

Maintain GFR

Page 25: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

GFR

time

Page 26: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

Clinical factors associated with accelerated progression

• Hypertension

• Heavy proteinuria

• Type of renal disease

• Genetic markers

• ? Ethnic relationship

• Smokers

Page 27: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

Management of chronic renal failure

• Reversal of underlying disease

• Avoid/treat acute insults

• Slow progression of nephropathy

• Minimise complications

• Prepare physically and mentally for renal replacement therapy

Page 28: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

GFR

time

Page 29: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice
Page 30: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

Slow disease progression

• Control of blood pressure

• Reduce proteinuria

• The special role of ACE inhibitors

• Low protein diet

Page 31: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

Lewis slide from uptodate

Page 32: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice
Page 33: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

METABOLICCOMPLICATIONS

Anaemia Left VentricularHypertrophy

AcceleratedAtherosclerosis

AcidosisRenal osteodystrophy

Catabolism

Hyperkalaemia

Page 34: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice
Page 35: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice
Page 36: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice
Page 37: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice
Page 38: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

Management of complications

• Erythropoietin

• Sodium bicarbonate

• Calcium-based phosphate binders

• Vitamin D supplementation

• Statins

• Anti-hypertensives

Page 39: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

Psychological and physical preparation for RRT

• Education about different forms of dialysis and transplantation

• Support and counselling of patient and family

• Surgical creation of dialysis access

• Discussion about potential living donor

Page 40: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

CHRONICRENAL FAILURE

PRE-DIALYSIS

ESRF

RENALTRANSPLANT

LIVINGDONOR

CADAVERIC

Page 41: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice
Page 42: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice
Page 43: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

Late referral to specialist care is associated with:

• Inferior biochemical control

• Malnourishment

• Poorer quality of life

• Longer hospitalisation

• Increased early morbidity and mortality

Page 44: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

Early referral Late referral

Page 45: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice

Initiation of dialysis

• Ethics – ‘conservative care of CRF’

• Ideally smooth and programmed

• Emergency in 50%

• Absolute and relative indications

Page 46: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice
Page 47: Chronic Renal Failure for General Practice