Medicine - Renal Flashcards

1
Q

When does the Anion gap apply and what does an increased ion gap mean? What value is increased?

A

Applies in Metabolic Acidosis eg. DKA, Sepsis (lactic acidosis), Aspirin overdose (salicylate)

Normal anion gap is 8-12

If raised ion gap, it is due to increased acid production eg. DKA/Sepsis/Toxins

If not raised, likely due to Addison’s, renal tubular acidosis

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2
Q

How is the anion gap calculated?

A

Sodium - (Chloride + Bicarbonate)

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3
Q

Name some causes of Metabolic Alkalosis

A

Diarrhoea/Vomiting (loss of H+ and Cl-), Conn’s, Diuretics (Loop/Thiazide), Hypokalaemia

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4
Q
AKI
Stages:
Causes:
Risk factors:
Investigations:
Management:
Indications for dialysis:
A

Stages:
Stage 1 - 50-100% rise in creatinine and urine output <0.5ml/kg/hour for 6 hours
Stage 2 - 100-200% rise in creatinine and urine output <0.5ml/kg/hour for 24 hours
Stage 3 - 200+% rise and <0.3ml/kg/hour for 12 hours or RRT needed

Causes:
Pre-renal eg. sepsis, anaphylaxis, renal artery stenosis, ACE
Renal: ATN from hypovolaemia, myoglobin, CT contrast, Gentamicin, lupus nephritis, IgA nephropathy, drugs
Post-renal = stuff that causes hydronephrosis

Risk factors: Age, Immobilisation, Diabetes, Sepsis, Dehydration, Medications eg. ACE/NSAIDs, Gentamicin (aminoglycosides), Glomerulonephritis

Investigations: Urine dipstick to see if blood and protein on stick (think glomerulonephritis, U&Es, LFTs for hepatorenal, CK for rhabdo, USS for hydronephrosis, ASO(strep)/ANCA/ANA/C3/4 (lupus)/Anti-GBM, Bone profile

Management: Sepsis 6 if appropriate, manage oedema with diuretics/fluid restriction, give Oxygen, give low dose morphine to cause pulmonary vasodilation, GTN, stop NSAIDs/ACE, monitor via Central Venous Pressure line, consider RRT

Indications for dialysis:

  • Oedema not responsive to treatment
  • Metabolic acidosis not reactive to treatment
  • Uraemic pericarditis/encephalopathy
  • Hyperkalaemia resistant to treatment
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5
Q
CKD
Pathophysiology:
Stages:
Causes:
Symptoms:
Management:
Complications:
A

Pathophysiology: > 3 months of reduced eGFR

Stages: 1 ->90, 2 - 60-90, 3a - >45-59, 3b - 30-44, 4 - 15-29, 5- <15

Causes: Diabetic nephropathy, Hypertensive nephropathy (eg. Conn’s, Phaeochromocytoma, Cushing’s, Renal artery stenosis, hyperthyroidism), Glomerulonephritis, Polycystic kidney disease (dominant, flank pain, fever, haematuria), Heart failure, Pyelonephritis, Age

Symptoms: Nausea, vomiting, sleep problems, mental state changes

Management: Treat underlying disease, statins/BP control/smoking control for CVS risk, give ACE to reduce proteinuria, give EPO/B12/Folate, have a low phosphate/low potassium diet, take Vitamin D

Complications: Anaemia of chronic disease due to EPO prod, functional iron deficiency, bone marrow suppression due to uraemia, Mineral bone disease due to reduced Vitamin D fixation (1’OH), Hyperparathyroidism (tertiary), Cardiovascular disease (main killer), Dyslipidaemia

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6
Q

Nephrotic Syndrome
Triad:
Complications:
Causes:

A

Triad: Oedema, Hypoalbuminaemia, Proteinuria (measured by ACR >3.5g/24 hours) (Hypercholesterolaemia)

Complications: Infection, VTE (clotting factors are protein bound, so lost to urine), CKD, Hypertension, Hyperlipidaemia

Causes: Membranous, Minimal change, Focal segmental

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7
Q

Nephritic Syndromes
Triad:
General Management:

A

Triad: (Sudden AKI), Haematuria, Proteinuria <3.5g (less), Hypertension

Management: ACE for proteinuria, BP control, Diuretics if fluid overloaded, VTE prophylaxis if hypalbuminaemia, statins for hypercholesterolaemia, IV methylprednisolone pulse therapy, oral corticosteroids

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8
Q
Post-strep glomerulonephritis
Cause:
Onset duration:
Target age:
Markers:
Management:
A

Causes: Group A B-haemolytic strep

Onset: 1-2 weeks after strep throat, 2-4 weeks after impetigo/cellulitis

Target age: Children

Markers: ASO, C3 - would see IgG/M and C3 deposition on biopsy

Management: Self-limiting, give ACE for hypertension/proteinuria

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9
Q
IgA Nephropathy
Cause:
Onset duration:
Target age:
Complication:
Markers/Biopsy:
Management:
A

Cause: URTI/GI infections leading to IgA reaction and mesangial deposits in the glomerulus

Onset: 1-2 days after infection

Age: 20-30 years old

Complication: Progresses to ESRF within 20 years

Markers: IgA increase

Management: ACE for proteinuria/hypertension

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10
Q

ANCA Vasculitis
Types:
Antibodies:
Management:

A

Types: Granulomatosis with polyangiitis (pulmonary involvement), Churg-Strauss (Asthma + Allergic Rhinitis + Purpura + Peripheral Neuropathy)

Antibodies: ANCA

Management: Immunosuppression

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11
Q
Anti-GBM
Pathophysiology:
Symptoms:
Antibodies:
Biopsy:
Management:
A

Pathophysiology: Antibodies against Type 4 collagen, also found in the lungs

Symptoms: Nephritic syndrome + Haemoptysis

Antibodies: Anti-GBM

Biopsy: IgG deposition and pulmonary infiltrates in the lungs

Management: Immunosuppression

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12
Q

Alport Syndrome
Pathophysiology:
Management:

A

Pathophysiology: X-linked (male), Type 5 collagen mutation - linked to ocular and hearing changes

Management: Supportive, RRT and transplant - can lead to anti-GBM

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13
Q

Lupus Nephritis
Cause:
Markers:

A

Cause: Complication of SLE
Markers: ANA and ds-DNA antibodies

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14
Q

Peritoneal Dialysis
What is it?
Advantages:
Disadvantages:

A

What is it: Patient’s own peritoneal membrane used as a dialysis membrane - solutes pass down concentration gradient into dialysate fluid. Can be done overnight or continuous ambulatory.

Advantages: QOL - can be done at home, Individualised planning

Disadvantages: Technical, Unsuitable in those with previous surgery, Infection (peritonitis), Can lead to Hernias, Hydrothorax, Peritoneal Sclerosis

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15
Q

Haemodialysis
What is it?
Advantages:
Disadvantages:

A

What is it: Blood from patient pumped through dialysis membrane.

Advantages: Efficient (works well), Unit-based with plenty of support staff

Disadvantages: Need access to slots and need to plan life around it, Infection, Haemodynamic instability, AVF steal syndrome, Haematomas, Muscle cramps, Haemolytic anaemia

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16
Q
Transplantation
Advantages:
Disadvantages:
Contraindications:
Types:
Anti-rejection treatment:
Complications:
A

Advantages: Preferred - normal lifestyle, better morbidity/ mortality

Disadvantages: Compliance with medication lifelong, risk of rejection, increased malignancy risk, infection risk due to immunosuppression, long wait times, difficult to be suitable

Contraindications: Active infection/malignancy, severe heart/lung disease, reversible renal disease, substance abuse, non-adherence to treatment

Types: Elective living donor, living unrelated donor transplantation (eg. donor chain, altruistic donation, live-donor paired exchange), deceased donor transplant (60% - takes years, lower survival rate than elective)

Anti-rejection treatment: Induction treatment - high dose given on transplantation (methylprednisolone + basiliximab)
Maintenance treatment: Prednisolone given long-term after transplant

Complications: Infections from donor/operation/immunosuppression, new onset transplant diabetes, malignancies

17
Q

Active Conservative Management

What is it?

A

Decision made to not treat if:

> 80 or WHO >3

18
Q
Loop Diuretics
Examples:
MOA:
Indications:
Side-effects:
A

Examples: Furosemide

MOA: NKCC2 (NaKCl) channel blocker

Indications: Fluid overload - must be given IV if oedema present, as protein-bound

Side-effects: Hyponatraemia, Hypokalaemia, Alkalosis, Diuresis

19
Q
Thiazide/Thiazide-like
Examples:
MOA:
Indications:
Side-effects:
A

Examples: Indapamide, Bendroflumethiazide

MOA: NaCl channel blocker in DCT

Indications: Hypertension

Side-effects: Hyponatraemia, Gout (hyperuricaemia), Hypokalaemia, Hypercalcaemia, Hypomagnesemia, Alkalosis

20
Q
K-Sparing Diuretics
Examples:
MOA:
Indications:
Side-effects:
A

Examples: Spironolactone (Aldosterone antagonist), Amiloride (ENaC blocker)

Indications: K-loss, HF

Side-effects: Hyperkalaemia, Gynaecomastia, Avoid with ACE (can cause hyperkalaemia badly)

21
Q

Steroids
Examples:
Side-effects:

A

Steroids
Examples: Prednisolone (PO), Methylprednisolone (pulse therapy, IM/IV), Hydrocortisone (IV), Dexamethosone

Side-effects: Osteoporosis, Psychosis, Immunosuppression, Adrenal Suppression, Hyperglycaemia, Cushingoid appearance/dry skin/muscle wasting, needs to be taken with adcal, PPI, given steroid card. not withdrawn abruptly