Chronic Kidney Dz Flashcards

1
Q

CKD: definition

A

Irreversible damage to parenchyma

Wide spectrum of primary diseases & different pathophysiological processes

Characteristic progressive decline: glomerulosclerosis, tubulointerstitial fibrosis

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2
Q

AKI v CKD

A

AKI: days-weeks
CKD: 6months-years

AKI: inability to regulate volume & most solutes
CKD: compensated

AKI: GFR=0
CKD: GFR = diminished but finite

AKI: potentially reversible
CKD: irreversible

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3
Q

Estimation of GFR: how to calculate this

A

1.86*Pcreatinine*age

*0.7242 for women

* 1.21 for African Americans

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4
Q

Pathogenesis of CKD

A

Primary process: dz that directly damage the kidney

Secondary process: non-dz events which inflict further damage in all primary kidney dz

Either way– loss of >50% renal mass –>

hemodynamic adaptation, glomerular htn, single nephron hyperfiltration + activation of RAAS, proteinurea + systemic htn

–> increased inflammation & oxidative stress, decrease in NO

–> damage to all parts of the kidney resulting in glomerulosclerosis & interstitial fibrosis

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5
Q

What is hyperfiltration?

A

Its a consequence of dying nephrons

The surviving nephrons compensate, so you don’t have a decline in overall GFR until >50% of the functioning nephrons are lost

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6
Q

How do you diagnose CKD?

A

Differentiate whether’ it’s acute or chronic: trend of creatinine, look for manifestations of chronic dz (anemia, hyperparathyroidism, well compensated?), imaging (to find renal vascular dz, post renal obstruction, and renal failure- tubulointerstitial fibrosis- echogenic by ultrasound, renal parenchymal volume loss, enlarged kidneys, obstruction, cystic dz)

Urinalysis: microscopic exam, quantify protein the urine with a spot sample

Renal ultrasound

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7
Q

Small kidneys can usually mean….

A

end stage renal dz

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8
Q

Large kidneys can mean…..

A

diabetic nephropathy

polycystic kidney dz

anything with deposits: amyloid, myeloma, cast nephropathy, interstitial nephritis, HIV-associated nephropathy

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9
Q

What are the consequences of CKD?

A

anemia

bone mineral dz (phos retention+decreased vitD–> 2ndary hyperparathyroidism –> renal osteodystrophy)

hypertension

cardiovascular dz: leading cause of death in ckd!

uremia

acidosis & electrolyte abnormalties

volume overload

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10
Q

Whats the mechanism of anemia in CKD?

A

Erhytheropoietin deficiency: cells in cortex sense hypoxia and seceret epo normally…this stops working

Inflammatory cytokines promote destruction of immature erythroblasts & release of hepcidin, which blocks iron absorption in the intestine and promotes iron release from macrophages

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11
Q

What’s the pathogensis of CVD in CKD?

A

CKD –> htn, ECV expansion, anemia

–>

LV hypertrophy
+ traditional and other sik fractors associated with CKD and uremia i.e. diabetes, htn, hyperlipidemia –> accelerated atherosclerosis & vascular calcification –> coronary ischemia –>

–> Cardiac fibrosis and remodeling, cardiomyopathy

–> CHF, myocardial infarction, sudden death

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12
Q

How do you get uremia in CKD? what are the manifestations? treatment?

A

Uremia = due to accumulation of organic waste products that are normally cleared by the kidney

Urea is quantitatively the most important solute excreted by the kidney but not thought to contribute substantially to uremic sx

Sx include: fatigue, anorexia, nausea, decreased mental acuity, pruritis

Treatment: dialysis or kidney transplant

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13
Q

How do you treat CKD?

A

Treat any primary cause

Proteinurea with RAAS inhibitors

Hypertension control

Glucose control in diabetics

Monitoring and treating the extra-renal manifestations of CKD

Dose ajust medications based on GFR

Avoid nephrotoxins: NSAIDS, IV contrast

Dietary modifications

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14
Q
A
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15
Q

Proteinurea in CKD: how do you test? whats the significance?

A

Screen with urine dipstick, then quantify with 24 h collection, spot microalbumin, or spot sample of urine protein and creatinine
Microalbuminurea = 30-300 mg/g
Albuminuria >300 mg/g

Independent of eGFR, proteinurea is associated with increased all cause mortality, CV events and mortality, progression of CKD, and ESRD

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16
Q

How do you treat glomerular htn?

A

Low protein diet

ACEIs or ARB’s

17
Q

How do you treat htn in CKD?

A

Aim for bp<130/80

Use ACEI or ARB+diuretic

18
Q

What’s the best way to assess extent of damage in CKD?

A

By estimating GFR, not by looking only at the creatinine