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Introduction to Renal Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Failure and Acute Renal Failure Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010
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Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

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Page 1: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Introduction to Renal Failure Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failureand Acute Renal Failure

Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO

University of New England

Physician Assistant Program

20-27 JAN 20010

Page 2: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Contact InformationContact Information

Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO

[email protected]

103 Boulder Point Rd., Suite 3

Plymouth, NH 03264

603-536-6355

603-536-6356 (fax)

Page 3: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Genitourinary Section-Part 1Genitourinary Section-Part 1

Male urogenital disorders/Impotence Nephrolithiasis Urinary Tract Infections

Page 4: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Genitourinary Section-Part 2Genitourinary 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

Page 5: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Introduction Introduction

Two syndromes of renal failure– Acute– Chronic

Diagnosis-2 Patterns– Clinical suspect with signs and symptoms– Found incidentally on lab screen (serum or

urine)

Page 6: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

AgendaAgenda

General evaluation of renal failure

– Definitions Acute Renal Failure (ARF)

– Etiology

– Diagnosis/Evaluation

– Treatment Chronic Renal Failure (CRF)

– Pathogenesis

– Complications

– Treatment of the complications

Page 7: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Definition-Renal failureDefinition-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

Page 8: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Definitions-Part IIDefinitions-Part II

Oliguria=Urine output (UOP) of less than 400 or 500 cc/24 hours

Anuria=No UOP Uremia

– Decreased renal function– Azotemia– Symptoms

Page 9: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Definitions-Part IIIDefinitions-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

Page 10: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

AssessmentAssessment

Labs– Urine– Serum

Radiographic

Page 11: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Assessment-Labs IAssessment-Labs I

Blood urea nitrogen-BUN Creatinine BUN/Creatinine ratio

– >40 in prerenal azotemia– <20 in intrinsic renal failure

Electrolytes– Potassium especially!

Page 12: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

CreatinineCreatinine

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

Page 13: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

ElectrolytesElectrolytes

Sodium reflects volume status Potassium, phosphate, and uric acid

increase

Page 14: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Assessment-Labs IIAssessment-Labs II

Urine output (UOP)-Monitor I’s and O’s Urine sodium (reflects concentrating ability

of kidneys) Body weight Toxin levels (i.e.: CPK-MM fraction in

rhabdomyolysis)

Page 15: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Glomerular filtration rateGlomerular 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

Page 16: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Assessment-Labs IIIAssessment-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)

Page 17: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Creatinine ClearanceCreatinine Clearance

[(Urine volume (ml/min) x Urine Creatinine)Divided by Serum Creatinine] x1.73/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……

Page 18: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Creatinine Clearance EstimatesCreatinine 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 men’s estimate)

Use in hospitals with IV antibiotic dosing

Page 19: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Assessment-Labs IIIAssessment-Labs III

Fractional excretion of Na+– (Urinary Na+ x Plasma Creatinine x 100%)

divided by (Plasma Na+ x Urinary Creatinine)

Page 20: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

AzotemiaAzotemia

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”

Page 21: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Assessment-RadiographicAssessment-Radiographic

Ultrasound– Excludes obstruction– ?Small kidneys--->CRF– Advantages

Non invasive No risky contrast dye Readily available

Page 22: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Assessment-Radiographic IIAssessment-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

Page 23: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Assessment-Wrap upAssessment-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

Page 24: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Complications of ARFComplications of ARF

Volume overload– Decreased sodium and water excretion– Resultant weight gain, heart failure, and edema

Hyponatremia Hypocalcemia

– Paresthesias, cramps, seizures, confusion

Page 25: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Complications of ARF IIComplications 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)

Page 26: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

General treatment of ARFGeneral 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!)

Page 27: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Acute renal failureAcute renal failure

Definitions Classifications/Types Treatment

Page 28: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

DefinedDefined

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)

Page 29: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

ClassificationClassification

Prerenal renal failure (Renal hypoperfusion)-55%

Renal/Parenchymal/Intrinsic-45% Post renal (Obstructive)-5%

Page 30: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

OutcomeOutcome

Usually reversible Can recover even if almost no function Nephrology opinion?

Page 31: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Prerenal azotemiaPrerenal azotemia

Due to renal hypoperfusion Usually reversible if restoring renal blood

flow (RBF) Parenchyma usually not damaged In severe cases, ischemia/injury

Page 32: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

EtiologyEtiology

Hypovolemia– Fluid loss– Decreased cardiac output– Decreased systemic vascular resistance

Renal hypoperfusion– See next slides

Page 33: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Fluid or blood lossFluid or blood loss

Dehydration GI bleeds Burns Osmotic diuresis (i.e.: diabetes) Sequestration (i.e.: pancreatitis)

Page 34: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Decreased Cardiac OutputDecreased Cardiac Output

Acute MI CHF (perhaps most common among

hospital patients) Arrhythmias Pulmonary embolism (PE) Mechanical ventilator

Page 35: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Altered systemic vascular Altered systemic vascular resistanceresistance

Sepsis, antihypertensives, anesthetics, anaphylaxis

Page 36: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

HypovolemiaHypovolemia

Leads to epinephrine release and subsequent vasoconstriction

Also activations of renin angiotensin system-->Vasoconstriction

Release of arginine vasopressin (AVP)

Page 37: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Renal hypoperfusionRenal hypoperfusion

Renal vasoconstriction due to epinephrine ACE inhibitors Cyclooxygenase inhibitors (i.e.: NSAID’s)-

Also lead to volume depletion Hyperviscosity syndromes

Page 38: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Hepatorenal syndromeHepatorenal syndrome

Cirrhosis leads to intrarenal vasoconstriction

Sodium retention Precipitated by bleeding, paracentesis,

diuretics, vasodilation, cyclooxygenase inhibitors

Page 39: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Prerenal azotemia-Prerenal azotemia-AssessmentAssessment

Symptoms– Thirst, dizzy

Signs– Low blood pressure, tachycardia, orthostasis– Low UOP

Page 40: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Lab evaluationLab evaluation

Urine volume Urine microscopy

– Hyaline/bland casts due to concentrated urine

Page 41: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Intrinsic renal failureIntrinsic renal failure

Renovascular obstruction-Large vessel disease

Glomerular or microvascular diseases

Page 42: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Renovascular obstructionRenovascular obstruction

Obstructed renal artery (Atherosclerosis, thrombus)

Renal vein obstruction (Thrombosis, external compression)

Page 43: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Glomerular diseasesGlomerular diseases

Glomerulonephritis Vasculitis Acute tubular necrosis Ischemic or nephrotoxic Interstitial nephritis Renal allograft rejection Will expand in later section

Page 44: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

VasculitisVasculitis

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

Page 45: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Acute tubular necrosisAcute 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)

Page 46: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

IschemiaIschemia

Hypoperfusion Resultant injury or ischemia Cortical necrosis Either recover (tubules regenerate) or

develop irreversible failure

Page 47: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

NephrotoxinsNephrotoxins

Radiocontrast (Intrarenal vasoconstriction) Aminoglycosides (Decrease GFR) Cyclosporin Chemotherapy (Cisplatin) Solvents (ethylene glycol) Others

Page 48: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Endogenous nephrotoxinsEndogenous 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)

Page 49: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Interstitial NephritisInterstitial Nephritis

Allergic (Antibiotics such as beta-lactams), NSAID’s, diuretics

Infection (Bacterial-pyelonephritis, viral-CMV, Fungus-Candidiasis)

Infiltration (Lymphoma, leukemia, sarcoidosis)

Idiopathic

Page 50: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Intrinsic renal failureIntrinsic 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

Page 51: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Intrinsic renal failure-Lab Intrinsic renal failure-Lab evaluationevaluation

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

Page 52: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Intrinsic renal failure-Lab Intrinsic renal failure-Lab evaluationevaluation

Proteinuria due to impaired reabsorption at the proximal tubules

Guided by etiology (i.e.: sedimentation rate if vasculitis)

Page 53: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Intrinsic renal failure-Intrinsic renal failure-TreatmentTreatment

Treat cause Remove insult Support, hope, and pray

Page 54: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

ExamplesExamples

Glucocorticoids in vasculitis and allergic interstitial nephritis)

Control blood pressure

Page 55: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Postrenal renal failurePostrenal renal failure

Urinary outflow obstruction Single kidney or urethral obstruction--

>Anuria

Page 56: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Etiologies of postrenal Etiologies of postrenal azotemiaazotemia

Prostate disease Neurogenic bladder

– I.e.: spinal cord injuries Anticholinergics Blood clots Stones Tumor or other extrarenal obstruction

Page 57: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Postrenal signs and Postrenal signs and symptomssymptoms

Bladder distension Abdominal pain-colic Renal distension (ultrasound) History of risk factors (prostate disease,

stones, etc.)

Page 58: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Treatment of obstructionTreatment of obstruction

Urologist Fix plumbing May need nephrostomy tube or suprapubic

catheter placed

Page 59: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Miscellaneous treatment Miscellaneous treatment wrap-upwrap-up

Loop diuretics may restore diuresis Dopamine may promote sodium and water

excretion Dialysis when needed

Page 60: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

Wrap-up II--Dialysis UseWrap-up II--Dialysis Use

?BUN > 100 Uremia Hypervolemia Hyperkalemia Acidosis Toxins

– Multiple

– Include digoxin, others

Page 61: Introduction to Renal Failure and Acute Renal Failure Jeffrey T. Reisert, DO University of New England Physician Assistant Program 20-27 JAN 20010.

More……More……

…to come in next slide set