chronic kidney disease Flashcards

1
Q

how is chronic kidney disease defined?

A

a reduction in kidney function
or structural damage
or both

has to be present for more than 3 months with associated health implications

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2
Q

what are the markers of kidney damage for a CKD diagnosis?

A

transplant
histological abnormalities
electrolyte abnormalities
ACR (urinary albumin:creatinine ratio) greater than 3mg/mmol
sediment abnormalities in the urine (haematuria/casts)
structural abnormalities detected by imaging
“THE ASS”
and/or a persistent reduction in renal function with an eGFR of less than 60

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3
Q

what is the definition of an accelerated progression of CKD?

A

a persistent decrease in eGFR of 25% or more and a change in CKD category within 12 months
or
a persiseant decrease of eGFR by 15 within 12 months

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4
Q

what is the most common cause of CKD?

A

diabetes

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5
Q

what are some potentially nephrotoxic drugs?

A

aminoglycosides
ACEi
ARBs
bisphosphonates
diuretics
NSAIDs
lithium

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6
Q

what are some causes of obstructive uropathy?

A

calculi
prostate
bladder
malignancy
strictures/stenosis

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7
Q

what are some complications of chronic kidney disease?

A

AKI
hypertension and dyslipidaemia
renal anaemia
renal mineral and bone disorder

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8
Q

what are the features of renal mineral and bone disorder

A

may present with bone pain, increased bone fragility and extra skeletal calcification

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9
Q

what causes renal mineral and bone disorder?

A

caused by disturbed vit D, calcium, PTH and phosphate metabolism
leads to secondary or tertiary hyperparathyroidism seen in progressive CKD

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10
Q

which organ activates vitamin D?

A

kidneys

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11
Q

what is the best way to treat CKD?

A

treat underlying cause

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12
Q

what is target BP in CKD?

A

<140/90

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13
Q

what is target BP in people with CKD and diabetes?

A

<130/80

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14
Q

when is ACEi/ARB dose altered?

A

if eGFR decrease from pre treatment is more than 25%
if serum creatinine increased from baseline by more than 30%

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15
Q

how are lipid levels lowered in CKD?

A

atorvastatin 20mg for primary/secondary prevention
increase dose if there is not a 40% reduction in non HLD cholesterol

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16
Q

what dietary restrictions are in place in CKD?

A

phosphate if PO4 high
salt restriction
potassium restriction if elevated
fluid restriction if volume overload

17
Q

if dietary restrictions dont work, what are the treatment options?

A

alfacalcidol- vit D
phosphate binders
- non-calcium based (lanthanum/sevelamer)

18
Q

what is the target haemoglobin in renal anaemia?

A

100-120g/L

19
Q

what is used for renal anaemia therapy?

A

struggle to absorb iron from gut in CKD
ferinject- ferric carboxymaltase

20
Q

what is used in HB is still <100?

A

ESAs