Acute Kidney Injury Flashcards

(63 cards)

1
Q

What are some examples of nephrotoxic drugs?

A

NSAIDs
aminoglycosides
ACE inhibitors/angiotensin II receptor antagonists
diuretics

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2
Q

The criteria for diagnosing AKI looks at what parameter(s)?

A

Rise in creatinine OR
Fall in urine output OR
Fall in eGFR in children / young adults

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3
Q

In terms of creatinine, what is the criteria for diagnosing AKI?

A

Rise in creatinine of 26µmol/L or more in 48 hours OR

>= 50% rise in creatinine over 7 days

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4
Q

In terms of fall in urine output, what is the criteria for diagnosing AKI?

A

Fall in urine output to less than 0.5ml/kg/hour for more than 6 hours in adults (8 hours in children)

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5
Q

In terms of egfr, what is the criteria for diagnosing AKI?

A

> = 25% fall in eGFR in children / young adults in 7 days

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6
Q

what increases the risk of AKI?

A

Surgery: Emergency surgery, ie, risk of sepsis or hypovolaemia, Intraperitoneal surgery

CKD, ie if eGFR < 60

Age >65 years

Disease: Liver disease, Diabetes, Heart failure

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7
Q

Acute kidney injury (AKI), previously termed acute renal failure, describes what?

A

reduction in renal function following an insult to the kidneys

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8
Q

Around what % of patients admitted to hospital develop AKI?

A

15%

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9
Q

NICE estimate that inpatient mortality of AKI in the UK might typically be 25-30% or more

A

true

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10
Q

Causes of AKI are traditionally divided into?

A

prerenal, intrinsic and postrenal causes

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11
Q

What are some examples of prerenal AKI causes?

A

hypovolaemia secondary to diarrhoea/vomiting

renal artery stenosis

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12
Q

What can cause intrinsic AKI?

A

toxins (drugs, contrast etc) or immune-mediated glomuleronephritis.

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13
Q

What are some examples of conditions that can result in intrinsic AKI?

A
glomerulonephritis
acute tubular necrosis (ATN)
acute interstitial nephritis (AIN), respectively
rhabdomyolysis
tumour lysis syndrome
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14
Q

What are some example causes of postrenal AKI?

A

kidney stone in ureter or bladder
benign prostatic hyperplasia
external compression of the ureter

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15
Q

use of iodinated contrast agents within the past what is a risk factor for AKI?

A

week

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16
Q

Define oliguria

A

urine output less than 0.5 ml/kg/hour

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17
Q

What steps can be undertaken for patients who are at risk of AKI and who are undergoing an investigation requiring contrast?

A

IV fluids

Certain drugs such as ACE inhibitors and ARBs may also be temporarily stopped.

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18
Q

How would AKI present?

A

Many patients with early AKI may experience no symptoms. However, as renal failure progresses the following may be seen:
reduced urine output
pulmonary and peripheral oedema
arrhythmias (secondary to changes in potassium and acid-base balance)
features of uraemia

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19
Q

What are the features of uraemia?

A

pericarditis or encephalopathy

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20
Q

What is a common blood test that can help detect AKI? What does this include?

A
'urea and electrolytes' or 'U&Es'. This returns a number of markers, including
sodium
potassium
urea
creatinine
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21
Q

all patients with suspected AKI should have what investigation?

A

urinalysis

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22
Q

if patients have no identifiable cause for the deterioration or are at risk of urinary tract obstruction they should have what investigation?

A

renal ultrasound within 24 hours of assessment.

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23
Q

What are the principles of AKI management?

A

Largely supportive
Fluid balance - to ensure that the kidneys are properly perfused but not excessively to avoid fluid overload
Review medications

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24
Q

What medications should be stopped in AKI as may worsen renal function?

A
  • NSAIDs (except if aspirin at cardiac dose e.g. 75mg od)
  • Aminoglycosides
  • ACE inhibitors
  • Angiotensin II receptor antagonists
  • Diuretics
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25
What medications may have to be stopped in AKI?
• Metformin • Lithium • Digoxin May have to be stopped in AKI as increased risk of toxicity (but doesn't usually worsen AKI itself)
26
What medications are usually SAFE to continue in AKI?
* Paracetamol * Warfarin * Statins * Aspirin (at a cardioprotective dose of 75mg od) * Clopidogrel * Beta-blockers
27
loop diuretics are routinely reccomended to artificially boost urine output
FALSE not recommend There is however a role for loop diuretics in patients who experience significant fluid overload.
28
low-dose dopamine are routinely reccomended (in an attempt to increase renal perfusion)
false
29
Hyperkalaemia needs prompt treatment to avoid arrhythmias which may potentially be life-threatening.
true
30
What is the role of Intravenous calcium gluconate in management of hyperkalaemia?
Stabilisation of the cardiac membrane
31
What medications aid Short-term shift in potassium from extracellular to intracellular fluid compartment in hyperkalaemia?
* Combined insulin/dextrose infusion | * Nebulised salbutamol
32
What medications remove potassium from the body in hyperkalaemia?
* Calcium resonium (orally or enema) * Loop diuretics * Dialysis
33
When is Renal replacement therapy (e.g. haemodialysis) used in the context of AKI?
when a patient is not responding to medical treatment of complications
34
What are the complications of AKI?
hyperkalaemia pulmonary oedema acidosis uraemia
35
DAMN mnemonic for drugs to stop in AKI -
diuretics, ACEi/ ARBs, metformin, NSAIDs
36
Why would Metformin be held in the context of AKI?
can cause Lactic Acidosis so must be stopped, if egfr is 30 or less then patients cannot take metformin
37
What investigation would you do if you suspected hydronephrosis?
US KUB
38
Renal artery stenosis is caused by?
atherosclerosis accounts for around 90% | fibromuscular dysplasia being the most common cause of the remaining 10%.
39
What are the features of renal artery stenosis?
hypertension kidney disease (chronic or AKI) 'flash pulmonary oedema'
40
Acute interstitial nephritis accounts for what % of drug-induced acute kidney injury?
25%
41
What can cause Acute interstitial nephritis?
drugs: the most common cause, particularly antibiotics systemic disease: SLE, sarcoidosis, and Sjögren's syndrome infection: Hanta virus , staphylococci
42
What specific drugs can cause Acute interstitial nephritis?
``` penicillin rifampicin NSAIDs allopurinol furosemide ```
43
Describe the histology of Acute interstitial nephritis?
marked interstitial oedema and interstitial infiltrate in the connective tissue between renal tubules
44
Describe the symptoms & features of Acute interstitial nephritis?
fever, rash, arthralgia eosinophilia mild renal impairment hypertension
45
What will you see in urinalysis of Acute interstitial nephritis?
sterile pyuria white cell casts Eosinophilic casts
46
Tubulointerstitial nephritis with uveitis (TINU) usually occurs in which group?
young females.
47
What are the symptoms of Tubulointerstitial nephritis with uveitis (TINU) ? What would urinalysis show?
fever, weight loss and painful, red eyes | Urinalysis is positive for leukocytes and protein.
48
What is the most common cause of AKI?
Acute tubular necrosis (ATN)
49
Is Acute tubular necrosis (ATN) reversible?
In the early stages ATN is reversible if the cause if removed.
50
What are the two main causes of Acute tubular necrosis (ATN) ?
ischaemia: shock, sepsis nephrotoxins: aminoglycosides, myoglobin secondary to rhabdomyolysis, radiocontrast agents, lead
51
What are the features of Acute tubular necrosis (ATN) ?
features of AKI: raised urea, creatinine, potassium | muddy brown casts in the urine
52
What are the histo-pathological featyres of Acute tubular necrosis (ATN) ?
tubular epithelium necrosis: loss of nuclei and detachment of tubular cells from the basement membrane dilatation of the tubules may occur necrotic cells obstruct the tubule lumen
53
What are the 3 phases of ATN?
oliguric phase polyuric phase recovery phase
54
What is tumour lysis syndrome?
breakdown of the tumour cells and the subsequent release of chemicals from the cell. Associated with treatment of high-grade lymphomas and leukaemias. It can occur in the absence of chemotherapy but is usually triggered by the introduction of combination chemotherapy.
55
tumour lysis syndrome can sometimes arise from steroid treatment alone
true
56
When should you suspect tumour lysis syndrome in AKI?
presence of a high phosphate and high uric acid level
57
What electrolyte imbalances can tumour lysis result in?
high potassium and high phosphate level in the presence of a low calcium.
58
Patients at high risk of TLS should be given what medications immediately prior to and during the first days of chemotherapy?
IV allopurinol or IV rasburicase Patients in lower-risk groups should be given oral allopurinol during chemotherapy cycles in an attempt to avoid the condition.
59
Why should Rasbicurase and allopurinol not be given together?
reduces the effect of rasburicase
60
How does rasburicase work?
Rasburicase is a recombinant version of urate oxidase, an enzyme that metabolizes uric acid to allantoin. Allantoin is much more water-soluble than uric acid and is, therefore, more easily excreted by the kidneys.
61
How is TLS graded?
Cairo-Bishop scoring system
62
Describe the Cairo-Bishop scoring system
``` Laboratory tumor lysis syndrome: abnormality in two or more of the following, occurring within three days before or seven days after chemotherapy. uric acid > 475umol/l or 25% increase potassium > 6 mmol/l or 25% increase phosphate > 1.125mmol/l or 25% increase calcium < 1.75mmol/l or 25% decrease ```
63
What is clinical TLS?
laboratory tumour lysis syndrome plus one or more of the following: increased serum creatinine (1.5 times upper limit of normal) cardiac arrhythmia or sudden death seizure