renal Flashcards

1
Q

when does APCKD present why we have hematuria

A

it presents in 4th and 5th decade we have hematuria because of cyst rupture

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2
Q

what causes dead in infants for arpkd

A

Die during first decade of life due to
renal failure, hepatic fibrosis and
pulmonary hypoplasia

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3
Q

compare the psgn with iga nephropathy timeline

A
Kidney biopsy
will show mesangial IgA deposits
on IF. In contrast, PSGN is seen
1-3wks after streptococcal
pharyngitis and is usually not
recurrent.
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4
Q

what is seen is psgn

A
IF
demonstrates a 'lumpy-bumpy'
granular deposits of IgG and C3
on the GBM, and subepithelial,
electron-dense deposits are seen
c4 complenet levels normal
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5
Q

tell pathophys of RPGN

A
Crescents consist of
glomerular parietal cells,
lymphocytes, and macrophages
along w/ abundant fibrin
deposition. Crescents eventually
become fibrotic, disrupting
glomerular fxn and causing
irreversible renal injury
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6
Q

pathophys of edema in nephrotic syndrome

A

Loss of protein > low plasma oncotic P >
fluid into interstitium > Increased RAAS
+ ADH > worsening edema

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7
Q

Di inspidus nephrogenic

A
ADH Nephrogenic DI
• Partial: slow but steady rise in urine
osmolality with water deprivation but not
increase in osmolality with ADH
• Urine osmo under 500
Primary Polydipsia
• Increase in serum and urine osmolality
with water deprivation (similar to partial
nephrogenic DI but more rapid)
• Hx of psych or medication induced
xerostomia
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8
Q

DPGN 2° to
circulating IC deposition may
complicate IE and can result in
acute renal insufficiency.

A

infective endocarditis

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9
Q

explain patophys of MCD

A
Systemic T-cell dysfxn
leads to the production of
glomerular permeability factor,
which causes podocyte foot
process fusion and ↓ the anionic
properties of the GBM. The loss
of (-) charge leads to selective
albuminuria.

Can be caused by URI, immunization,
insect bite

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10
Q

explain function proteinuria and tubular proteinuria

A
Tubular proteinuria
• B2 microglobulin, Ig light chain, AA and
retinaL binding protein in urine
Functional proteinuria
• Caused by exercise, high fever,
emotional stress, cold exposure
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11
Q

hyaline arteriosclerosis vs malignant htn

A
Homogeneous deposition of
eosinophilic hyaline material in
the intima and media of small
arteries and arterioles
characterises hyaline
arteriolosclerosis

Malignant HTN: fibrinoid necrosis and
hyperplastic arterioloscleosis, amphorous
material with onion like, concentrick
thickening of the walls

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12
Q

cholestrol embolism syndrome

A
Blue digits and livedo reticularis with
normal peripheral pulses
• If after vascular procedure think
atheroemboli (contains cholesterol clefts)
Postprocedure atheroemboli
• Acute kidney injury is most common
symptoms
• Rarey frank infarction and flank pain
(atheroemboli is small)
• GI tract, CNS and retinal vessels are
common involve
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13
Q

explain pathogensis of BPH

A
BPH
• Bladder outflow obstruction
• Epithelial and stromal hyperplasia in the
periurethral and transitional zone
Results
• Bladder wall hypertrophy
• Bladder diverticulum
• Hydronephrosis > renal parenchymal
pressure atrophy
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14
Q

explain pathophys of atn which is affected by toxins and which is affected by ischemia

A
Ischemic injury
predominantly affects the renal
medulla, which has a relatively
low blood supply. The terminal
(straight) portion of the proximal
tubules and the thick ascending
limb of the LOH are the most
commonly involved portions of
the nephron due to their high
meta rate and loca
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15
Q

ethylene glycol injestion casuese what

A

Ethylene glycol ingestion causes
ATN w/ vacuolar degen and
ballooning of the PCT cells.

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16
Q

portal htn affects kidney fucntion

A
Portal HTN causing renal failure
• Hallmark: renal vasoconstriction
Prolonged hypotension or severe infection
• Acute tubular necrosis
• Renal failure, olgiuria
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17
Q

when do u see sterile pyuria

A

Sterile pyuria:

chlamydia, ureaplasma, TB

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18
Q

renal oncytoma

A
Renal Oncocytomas
• Originate from the collecting duct
• Well differentiated without perinuclear
clearing
• Central scar
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19
Q

mechanism of nsaid induced renal papillary necrosis

A

NSAIDs concentrate in the renal medulla
can cause uncouple oxidative
phosphorylation (depletes glutathione)
causing lipid peroxidation

20
Q

what do you see in tubular epithelial necrosis

A

Tubular epithelial necrosis, denudation

of BM, epithelial casts

21
Q

how does uremia alter thyroid function

A

Can cause uremia which decreases T4 to

T3

22
Q

what sort of arthiritis is assoicated with HENoch scholen purpura

A

Migratory arthralgias

23
Q

what is adynamic bone disease

A

pth resistance

24
Q

how does rcc of the right kideny -present with

A
RCC tends to invade the renal
vein; IVC obstr can occur by
intraluminal extension of the
tumour. obstr of the IVC
produces symmetric bilateral
extremity oedema, often a/w
prominent devel of venous
collaterals in the abdo wall.
25
Q

explain -apthophys of glomeular sclerosis

A
compensatory
medial hypertrophy and
fibrointimal proliferation;
endothelial dmg from ↑ systemic
pressure also leads to hyaline
arteriolosclerosis. The narrowed
arteriolar lumens cause a progr ↓
in renal blood flow, resulting in
glomerular ischemia and fibrosis
26
Q

aperson comes with chronic diarrhea has flank pain and radiolucent stone why

A

gi chronic diarhea = hco3 loss promotes acidic urine

27
Q

why BPH leads to hematuria

A
BPH is a/w stromal and glandular
growth in the periurethral and
transitional zone of the prostate.
The hyperplastic cells are
supported by the formation of
new blood vessels, which are
friable and prone to bleeding.
Therefore, BPH is often a/w
microscopic or gross hematuria
28
Q

explain rhabdomyolysis

A
Rhabdomyolysis usually presents
w/ myalgia, proximal muscle
weakness, and dark urine
(Mburia) in the setting of trauma,
sepsis, or overexertion
29
Q

what sort of surgeries can cause ATN

A
Surgeries complicated by
significant blood loss or those req
the use of cardiopulm bypass or
clamping of the aorta can cause
sustained renal hypoperfusion
and result in ATN. ATN presents
w/ oliguria, ↑ serum creatinine,
and BUN/creatinine ratio <20:1.
UA is characterised by muddy
brown granular casts composed
of sloughed renal tubular
epithelial cells.
30
Q

hwo aminglycosides destroy tubules

A
Aminoglycosides are filtered
across the glomerulus and
concentrate in the renal tubules,
leading to PCT injury and ATN.
This is visualised histo as focal
tubular epithelial necrosis
31
Q

why nsaids contraindicated in ckd

A
Pts w/ intravascular volume
depletion (e.g. CHF, diarrhoea,
excessive diuresis) and CKD
depend on renal PG production
to dilate the afferent glomerular
arteriole and maintain the GFR.
NSAIDs inhib PG synthesis,
which cause prerenal azotaemia
in at-risk pts.
32
Q

Fibromuscular dysplasia

A
Fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD)
is characterised by abn tissue
growth w/i arterial walls,
resulting in stenotic and tortuous
arteries that can cause tissue
ischemia and are prone to
aneurysm formation.
33
Q

explain artheroembolism

A
Atheroembolic disease typically
occurs after an invasive vascular
procedure due to mech
dislodgement of atherosclerotic
plaque, resulting in the
showering of chol-rich
microemboli into the circulation
34
Q

how does artheroembolic disease manifest as hypertension

A

HTN (due to renin

release from hypoxic tissue

35
Q

how does bladder prevent infection

A

Bladder mucosa prevents attachment
• Fimbriae facilitate attachment
• Urea of urine kills bacteria
• Urine flow

36
Q

rf for pyelonephritis
Serum calcium >13 mg/dL is
suggestive of an underlying
malignancy

A
Vesicoureteral reflex (mos important)
• Sex
• Hematogenous spread in
immunocompromised
• Antibiotics killing normal flora
37
Q

what sort of incontinence people with MS develop

A

loss of inhibiton =hyperactivity of bladder eventually bladder becomes atonic and dilated=overflow incontinence

38
Q

what can test incomplete bladder testingGross mottling & cyanosis
Arterial fibrinoid necrosis & capillary thrombotic occlusion

A

PVR testing w/ US or
catheterization can confirm
inadequate bladder emptying

39
Q

hyperacute kidney rejection

chronic kidney rejection

A

Gross mottling & cyanosis
Arterial fibrinoid necrosis & capillary thrombotic occlusion

Vascular wall thickening & luminal narrowing
Interstitial fibrosis & parenchymal atrophy

40
Q

how to reduce risk of uti

A
risk for UTI can be
reduced by avoiding unnecessary
catheterization, using sterile
technique when inserting the
catheter, and removing the
catheter as soon as possible.
41
Q

how can multiple myeloma induce osteoprosis

A

reduces pth secretion

42
Q

how to differentiate between extrrenal hyonatremia vs renalc auses of hyponatermia

A

low urinary sodium will be extrarenal causes of hyponatremia

43
Q

cardiorenal syndrome pathophys

A

how cardiorenal syndrome differentiates left heart from right heart

44
Q

where is carbonic anhydrase used

A

Carbonic anhydrase present in eye,
pancrease, GI tract, CNS, kidney (PCT)
and RBC

45
Q

name some ototoxic agents

A

aminoglycosides,

salicylates, and cisplatin).

46
Q

what is acute urinary retention and what causes it

A

transitional cell carcinoma and rectal or uterine malignancy.+ BPH. hard rectla may push against bladder and ureter =constriction