Passmed nephrology Flashcards

1
Q

What is acute interstitial nephritis?

A

Hypersensitivity reaction causing inflammation of the space between the cells and the tubules of the kidney

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2
Q

What causes interstitial nephritis?

A

Drugs: Penicillin, Rifampicin, NSAIDS, Allopurinol, Furosemide
Systemic disease: SLE, Sarcoidosis, Sjorgens
Infection: Hanta virus, Staphylococci

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3
Q

Features of Interstitial Nephritis?

A

Fever, rash, arthralgia
Eosinophilia
Mild renal impairment
HTN

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4
Q

What investigations for interstitial nephritis?

A

MSU (sterile pyuria & white cell casts)

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5
Q

What is the treatment for acute interstitial nephritis?

A

Steroids for the inflammation

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6
Q

AKD vs. CKD?

A

CKD has bilaterally small kidneys
CKD presents with Hypocalcemia

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7
Q

Where is vitamin D activated?

A

Kidneys

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8
Q

What causes enlarged kidneys despite CKD?

A

SHAPE

Scleroderma
HIV-associated nephropathy
Amyloidosis
Polycystic kidney disease
Endocrine: Diabetic nephropathy (early stages)

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9
Q

What are the causes of AKI?

A

Prerenal: HF, Dehydration, Renal artery stenosis
Intrinsic: Glomerulonephritis, ATN, AIN, Rhabdomyolysis, Tumour lysis syndrome
Postrenal: BPH, Kidney stone, External compression of ureter

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10
Q

What are the indications of dialysis in AKI?

A

A acidosis (ph<7.1]
E electrolyte derangement (refractory hyperkalaemia)
I intoxication/ingestion (alcohol/salicylates/lithium)
O overload of fluid (congestive cardiac failure)
U uraemia (uraemia pericarditis or encephalopathy)

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11
Q

What drugs to stop in AKI?

A

Stop the DAAMN Drugs

Diuretics
ACEi
ARBs
Metformin
NSAIDs

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12
Q

What are the AKI stages?

A

1 Increase 1.5-1.9x baseline OR < 0.5ml/kg/h for >6 consecutive hours
2 Increase 2.0-2.9x baseline OR < 0.5ml/kg/h for >12 consecutive hours
3 Increase > 3x baseline or >354 µmol/L OR < 0.3ml/kg/h for > 24h or anuric for 12h

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13
Q

What would a urine dipstick with proteinuria indicate in an AKI?

A

The urine dip shows proteinuria which would only be present with an intrinsic renal AKI

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14
Q

Can aspirin be continued in an AKI?

A

Aspirin at a cardioprotective dose (75mg) can be continued as it will not negatively impact renal function.

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15
Q

What are the features of AKI?

A

Most patients usually asymptomatic but as renal failure progresses the following may be seen:

reduced urine output
pulmonary and peripheral oedema
arrhythmias (secondary to changes in potassium and acid-base balance)
features of uraemia (for example, pericarditis or encephalopathy)

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16
Q

What is the difference in sodium aspects between prerenal uraemia vs. ATN

A

In prerenal uraemia, the body is trying to retain fluids. Hence, it is going to retain sodium to increase them, resulting in high blood sodium and low urine sodium.

16
Q

When to refer to nephrologist in AKI?

A

Renal tranplant
ITU patient with unknown cause of AKI
Vasculitis/ glomerulonephritis/ tubulointerstitial nephritis/ myeloma
AKI with no known cause
Inadequate response to treatment
Complications of AKI
Stage 3 AKI (see guideline for details)
CKD stage 4 or 5
Qualify for renal replacement hyperkalaemia / metabolic acidosis/ complications of uraemia/ fluid overload (pulmonary oedema)

17
Q

What is the diagnostic criteria for AKI?

A

Rise in creatinine of 26µmol/L or more in 48 hours OR
>= 50% rise in creatinine over 7 days OR
Fall in urine output to < 0.5ml/kg/hour for more than 6 hours in adults (8 hours in children) OR
>= 25% fall in eGFR in children / young adults in 7 days.

18
Q

What is the difference between ADPKD1 vs ADPKD2

A

ADPKD 1: 85%, chromosome 16, presents with renal failure earlier
ADPKD 2: 15%, chromosome 4

19
Q

What is the diagnostic criteria in ADPKD?

A

Ultrasound diagnostic criteria (in patients with positive family history)
two cysts, unilateral or bilateral, if aged < 30 years
two cysts in both kidneys if aged 30-59 years
four cysts in both kidneys if aged > 60 years

20
Q

What is the management for ADPKD?

A

Tolvaptan. Tolvaptan is a selective vasopressin antagonist. By inhibiting the binding of vasopressin to the V2 receptors, tolvaptan reduces cell proliferation, cyst formation and fluid excretion

21
Q

What are the features of ADPKD?

A

hypertension
recurrent UTIs
flank pain
haematuria
palpable kidneys
renal impairment
renal stones

22
Q

What are the extra-renal manifestations of ADPKD?

A

liver cysts (70% - the commonest extra-renal manifestation): may cause hepatomegaly
berry aneurysms (8%): rupture can cause subarachnoid haemorrhage
cardiovascular system: mitral valve prolapse, mitral/tricuspid incompetence, aortic root dilation, aortic dissection
cysts in other organs: pancreas, spleen; very rarely: thyroid, oesophagus, ovary

23
Q
A