CKD Flashcards

1
Q

What is CKD stage 1?

A

GFR 90+ but other long-term evidence of kidney disease e.g.
proteinurea/haematuria
Genetic diagnosis
Structural abnormality

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2
Q

What is CKD stage 2?

A

GFR 60-89 + other long-term evidence of kidney disease e.g.
proteinurea/haematuria
Genetic diagnosis
Structural abnormality

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3
Q

What are the stages of CKD 3+?

A

3: GFR 30-59
4: 15-29
5: <15

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4
Q

What re the investigations for CKD?

A

Bloods: FBC, U&Es, LFTs, calcium, phosphate, PTH levels, glucose
Urinalysis & MCS - quantify proteinurea, exclude infection, look for casts
24h urinary protein/creatinine clearance - assess severity/nephrotic syndrome
CXR if pulmonary oedema suspected
Renal USS is obstructive causes suspected
DTPA scan - investigate vascular supply
Renal biopsy if cause unknown
Bone imaging - renal bone disease

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5
Q

What is CKD?

A

Long standing and progressive impairment in renal function
>3 months evidence of kidney damage (proteinuria, haematuria or anatomical abnormality) and/or impaired GFR
Patients at risk hyperrenisve or diabetic should be screened regularly

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6
Q

What are the causes of CKD?

A

Congenital and inherited disease:
Polycystic kidney disease (adult and infantile forms)
Tuberous sclerosis
Congenital obstructive uropathy
Glomerular disease:
Primary glomerulonephritides
Secondary glomerular disease- diabetes mellitus, amyloidosis, SLE
Vascular disease:
Hypertensive nephrosclerosis (common in black Africans)
Reno-vascular disease
Small and medium-sized vessel vasculitis
Tubulointerstitial disease
Urinary tract obstruction

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7
Q

What are the symptoms and signs of CKD?

A

Anaemia- pallor, lethargy
CNS- confusion, coma, fits
Platelet abnormality- epistaxis, bruising
Skin- pigmentation, pruritus
CVS- uraemic pericarditis, hypertension, PVD, heart failure
GI- anorexia, nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea
Renal- nocturne, polyuria, oedema
Endocrine- amenorrhoea, erectile dysfunction, infertility
Mineral and bone disorder- osteoporosis, osteomalacia, hyperparathyroidism, osteosclerosis, dynamic bone disease
Polyneuropathy

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8
Q

What are the complications of CKD?

A

Polyneuropathy- paraesthesiae and weakness
Autonomic dysfunction- postural hypotension and disturbed GI mobility
CVD- MI and cardiac failure (most common cause of death)
Peptic ulceration, acute pancreatitis, increased incidence of malignancy

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9
Q

How is CKD defined from AKI?

A

Normochromic anaemia, small kidneys and renal osteodystrophy are in favour of CKD

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10
Q

What are the complications of long term dialysis?

A

CVD as a result of atheroma
Sepsis- s. aureus infection in peritoneal dialysis (endocarditis)
Amyloidosis- carpal tunnel, joint pains (shoulders)

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11
Q

How does diabetes cause CKD?

A

Excess glucose attaches to the walls on the efferent arteriole (non-enzymatic glycation)
Stiff and narrow (hyaline arteriosclerosis)
Increased pressure, hyper-filtration

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12
Q

What occurs with calcitriol with CKD?

A

Produced by hydroxylation of calcidiol in the PCT
People with CKD have reduced hydroxylation capacity - less calcitriol is produced
Leading to hypocalcaemia

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13
Q

What are the causes of anaemia in CKD?

A

Normochromic normocytic anaemia
Reduced erythropoietin levels
Reduced absorption of iron
Anorexia/nausea due to uraemia
Reduced red blood cell survival
Stress ulceration leading to chronic blood loss
blood loss due to capillary fragility and poor platelet function

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14
Q

What indicated whether the kidney disease is chronic or acute?

A

Hypocalcaemia is seen in chronic disease

Renal failure results in reduced levels of metabolised Vit D

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15
Q

Which chronic conditions present with normal/enlarged kidneys?

A

autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease
diabetic nephropathy
amyloidosis
HIV-associated nephropathy

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16
Q

What is the most common cause of death for those with CKD on haemodialysis?

A

Ischaemic heart disease

17
Q

How does autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease present?

A
Abdo pain
Early satiety 
Hypertension
Bilateral flank masses
Mitral valve disease
Hepatic cysts- hepatomegaly
Diverticulosis
Intracranial aneurysms
Ovarian cysts