Renal Path II Flashcards

1
Q

What is the presentation of acute pyelonephritis?

A

fever, flank pain, costovertebral angle tenderness
neutrophils
WBCs in urine, WBC casts
**often ascending UTI like E coli

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2
Q

What does a CT show w/ acute pyelonephritis?

A

striated parenchymal enhancement

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3
Q

What are risk factors for acute pyelonephritis?

A
indwelling urinary catheter
obstruction
vesicoureteral reflux
diabetes
pregnancy
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4
Q

When do you see thyroidization of the kidney?

A

Chronic pyelonephritis

get eosinophilic casts

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5
Q

What is drug-induced interstitial nephritis?

A

give drugs that act as haptens and induce hypersensitivity 1-2 weeks later
get pyuria and azotemia

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6
Q

What are the presenting symptoms of drug-induced interstitial nephritis? Treatment?

A

fever
rash
eosinophilia
azotemia

Treat w/ 1-2 weeks corticosteroids

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7
Q

Which drugs cause drug-induced interstitial nephritis?

A
NSAIDs
Diuretics
Penicillin Derivatives
PPI
sulfonamides
rifampin
allopurinol
indinavir
mesalamine
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8
Q

What is diffuse cortical necrosis?

A

cortical infarction of both kidneys via combo of vasospasm and DIC
seen in patients who experience obstetric catastrophes or septic shock or ARDs.

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9
Q

What are the 2 mechanisms of injury in acute tubular necrosis? Key finding?

A

ischemic and nephrotoxic

see granular muddy brown casts

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10
Q

What are the 3 phases of acute tubular necrosis?

A
  1. inciting event
  2. maintenance phase—oliguric, 1-3 weeks, risk of hyperkalemia, metabolic acidosis, uremia
  3. recovery phase-polyuric, BUN and serum creatinine fall, risk of hypokalemia
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11
Q

How does ischemia cause acute tubular necrosis? Which parts of the kidney are most susceptible to injury?

A

renal tubular cells slough into lumen

PCT and thick ascending limb are super suspectible

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12
Q

What are some toxic substances that could cause nephrotoxic acute tubular necrosis?

A
aminoglycosides
radiocontrast dye
lead
cisplatin
crush injury (myoglobinuria)
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13
Q

What do you see in renal papillary necrosis?

A

sloughing off of necrotic renal papillae
gross hematuria and proteinuria
**triggered by recent infection or immune stimulus

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14
Q

Which conditions is renal papillary necrosis associated with?

A
SAAD papa
Sickle Cell
Acute pyelonephritis
analgesics (NSAIDs)
Diabetes
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15
Q

What defines acute renal failure?

A

decline in renal fcn w/ increase in creatinine and BUN

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16
Q

Describe prerenal azotemia.

A

BUN/CR>20 (BUN reabsorbed relatively more)
decreased renal blood flow
decreased FENa 500

17
Q

Describe intrinsic renal failure.

A

BUN/Creatinine ratio 2%

Urine osmolality

18
Q

Describe postrenal azotemia.

A

caused by outflow obstruction like BPH or kidney stone
only get this w/ bilateral obstruction
FENa

19
Q

What are the consequences of renal failure?

A
MAD HUNGER
Metabolic Acidosis
Dyslipidemia
Hyperkalemia
Uremia (increased BUN)
Na+/H2O retention--pulmonary edema, heart failure
Growth retardation
EPO failure (anemia)
Renal osteodystrophy from decreased VIT D activation
20
Q

What are the consequences of uremia in renal failure?

A
nausea and anorexia
pericarditis
asterixis
encephalopathy
platelet dysfunction
21
Q

Describe what the deal is with renal osteodystrophy.

A

failure of Vit D hydroxylation, hypocalcemia and hyperphosphatemia.
hyperparathyroidism.
Causes subperiosteal thinning of bones
supplement w/ Vit D and Ca++