CKD Flashcards

1
Q

What is CKD

A

Chronic Kidney Disease - chronic reduction in kidney function which tends to be permanent and progressive over a period of three months .

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2
Q

What are the TWO MAIN causes of CKD

A

Diabetes
Hypertension

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3
Q

What is the link between diabetes and CKD

A

1- excess glucose in blood sticks to proteins ( NON- ENZYMATIC GLYCATION)
2- efferent arterioles become stiff and narrow- HYALINE ARTERIOSCLEROSIS
3- increased pressure in glomeruli
4- hyperfiltration
5- Response to high pressure state - supportive mesangial cells secrete structural matrix expanding size of glomerulus
6- Over years this dimishes nephron ability to filter blood leading to CKD

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4
Q

What can a decreased infiltration rate lead in relation to urea

A

Ureamia -urea in blood

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5
Q

What can ureamia cause

A

-N/V
- Encephalopathy
- Pericarditis
- Bleeding
-Uremic frost

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6
Q

Role of kidneys in regulation of Calcium

A
  • Normally kidneys activate vit d which helps to increase absorption of Ca from diet
  • In CKD this is disrupted leading to hypocalcaemia
  • can lead to secondary hyperparathyroidism
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7
Q

Risk factors for CKD

A

Older age
Hypertension
Afro-carribean
Diabetes
Smoking
Use of medications that affect the kidneys

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8
Q

Pathophysiology of HT and CKD

A
  • Walls of arteries begin to thicken in order to withstand pressure- but causes a narrow lumen
  • less o2 delivery, ischemic injury in nephron glomerulus
  • macrophages and fat laden macrophages called foam cells slip into the damaged glomerulus
  • growth factors are secreted TGF-B1
  • Cause mesangial cells to regress back to mesangioblasts
  • these secrete extracellular structural matrix - leads to glomerulosclerosis + diminshes nephrons ability to filter blood
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9
Q

Signs of CKD

A
  • HT
    -Fluid Overload
  • Uraemic sallow
  • Pallor - anaemia due to decreased EPO
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10
Q

Failing GFR lead to what?

A

Renin secretion by kidneys > HT

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11
Q

Symptoms of CKD

A
  • aSYMPTOMATIC early on
  • Lethargy
  • Pruritus
  • Muscle Cramps
    -Nausea
  • Frothy Urine
  • diabetic nephropathy
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12
Q

Investigations for CKD

A

Urine Dip/ urinalysis- proteinuria + haematuria + glycosuria
ACR
FBC- normocytic anaemia secondary to reduced EPO
Bone profile and PTH
Renal US
ECG

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13
Q

Describe the G score system

A

G1 = eGFR >90
G2 = eGFR 60-89
G3a = eGFR 45-59
G3b = eGFR 30-44
G4 = eGFR 15-29
G5 = eGFR <15 (known as “end-stage renal failure”)

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14
Q

Describe the A score system

A

The A score is based on the albumin:creatinine ratio:

A1 = < 3mg/mmol
A2 = 3 – 30mg/mmol
A3 = > 30mg/mmol

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15
Q

What would give you a definitive diagnosis of CKD

A

eGFR of < 60 or proteinuria
eGFR < 90ml/min/1.73m2 + signs of renal damage
Albuminuria > 30mg/24hrs

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16
Q

When would you refer to a specialist

A

-eGFR < 30
-ACR ≥ 70 mg/mmol
-Accelerated progression defined as a decrease in eGFR of 15 or 25% or 15 ml/min in 1 year
-Uncontrolled hypertension despite ≥ 4 antihypertensives

17
Q

What would slow the progression of the disease

A

Optimise diabetic control
Optimise hypertensive control
Treat glomerulonephritis

18
Q

What would reduce the risk of complications in CKD

A

Exercise, maintain a healthy weight and stop smoking
Special dietary advice about phosphate, sodium, potassium and water intake
Offer atorvastatin 20mg for primary prevention of cardiovascular disease

19
Q

How would you treat complications in CKD

A

Oral sodium bicarbonate to treat metabolic acidosis
Iron supplementation and erythropoietin to treat anaemia
Vitamin D to treat renal bone disease
Dialysis in end stage renal failure
Renal transplant in end stage renal failure

20
Q

Complications of CKD

A

Cardio
- CVD
- HT
-Hypercholestrolaemia

MSK
- CKD- metabolic bone disease

Endo
- secondary hyperparathyroidism
- diabetes

Oedema

21
Q

What type of anaemia does chronic kidney disease most commonly cause?

A

Normocytic

22
Q

What type of anaemia does chronic kidney disease most commonly cause?

A

Diffuse proliferation glomerulonephritis

23
Q

A patient with a history of chronic kidney disease dies following a myocardial infarction. What does his renal biopsy demonstrate?

A

Diabetic nephropathy

24
Q

A patient with a history of rheumatoid arthritis develops chronic kidney disease. A renal biopsy is taken:

A

Amyloidosis