Deja - Internal - Nephrology COPY Flashcards

(59 cards)

1
Q

ARF - Signs and symptoms NOT 2o to uremia:

A
  1. Metabolic acidosis.
  2. Hyperkalemia –> Arrhythmias.
  3. Fluid overload –> Pulm. edema, CHF, HTN.
  4. Hyperphosphatemia.
  5. HTN 2o to excess renin secretion.
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2
Q

Oliguria - Definition:

A

Less than 400cc/24h.

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3
Q

What tests would you initially order to evaluate for ARF?

A
  1. Urine/serum electrolytes.
  2. Urine/serum BUN/Cr.
  3. Urinalysis including urine osmolarity.
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4
Q

What is FENa?

A

Stands for fractionals sodium excretion and is the best diagnostic test to help discriminate between the different types of ARF.

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5
Q

FENa in Prerenal, renal, and post renal?

A

Pre –> >2%.

Postrenal –> >4%.

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6
Q

Name the type of ARF associated with the following urinary sediment findings: Red cell casts, urine eosinophils, WBCs, granular casts.

A

Red cell casts –> GN.
Urine eosinophils –> AIN.
WBC casts –> AIN.
Granular casts –> ATN.

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7
Q

What medications classically cause ATN?

A

CLAAP

Contrast
Lithium
Aminoglycosides
Amphotericin
Pentamine
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8
Q

What are the causes of AIN?

A

Inflammation of the renal parenchyma caused by:

  1. Medications: diuretics, NSAIDs, penicillin.
  2. Infection: CMV, EBV, Toxo, Syphilis.
  3. Systemic diseases: Sarco, Sjögren.
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9
Q

Uremic syndrome - Cardiovascular:

A
  1. HTN

2. Pericarditis

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10
Q

Uremic syndrome - Pulmonary:

A
  1. Pleural effusions

2. Pulm. edema.

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11
Q

Uremic syndrome - CNS:

A
  1. Asterixis

2. Clonus

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12
Q

Uremic syndrome - Hematology:

A
  1. Anemia due to low erythropoietin.

2. Incr. bleeding time due to platelet dysfunction.

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13
Q

Uremic syndrome - GI:

A
  1. Nausea

2. Vomiting

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14
Q

Uremic syndrome - Metabolic:

A
  1. Acidosis.
  2. Electrolyte imbalances (especially hyperkalemia).
  3. Hypocalcemia (lack of vitD).
  4. Azotemia.
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15
Q

What can be used to measure the severity of CRF?

A

GFR.

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16
Q

In CRF, there is decreased synthesis of what 2 entities?

A
  1. VitD

2. EPO

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17
Q

Electrolyte abnormalities seen in CRF:

A
  1. Hyperkalemia
  2. Hypocalcemia
  3. Hyperphosphatemia
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18
Q

Indications for dialysis:

A

AEIOU

Acidosis
Electrolyte abnormalities
Ingestion of toxins
Overload of fluid
Uremic symptoms
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19
Q

How can urinary cholesterol be identified?

A

If urine is seen under polarized light, there will be “MALTESE CROSSES”.

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20
Q

Other names for minimal change disease?

A

Nil disease or lipoid nephrosis.

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21
Q

Nephrotic syndrome - MC primary cause in adults:

A

FSGS or membranous glomerulonephritis.

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22
Q

Nephrotic syndrome - 2 forms, type I is slowly progressive and type II has autoantibodies against C3 and is more rapidly progressive.

A

Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis.

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23
Q

Nephrotic syndrome - Associated with refractory HTN:

A

FSGS

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24
Q

Nephrotic syndrome - Frequently recurs:

A

Minimal change disease

25
Nephrotic syndrome - Granular deposits of IgG and C3:
Membranous glomerulonephritis.
26
Nephrotic syndrome - Present in young, black men with refractory HTN:
FSGS
27
Nephrotic syndrome - Associated with HIV, IVDA, SCA:
FSGS.
28
Nephrotic syndrome - "Spike and dome" on histology due to excess basement membrane:
Membranous glomerulonephritis.
29
Nephrotic syndrome - Slowly progressive with minimal response to steroids:
Membranous GN
30
Nephrotic syndrome - Associated with hep, SLE, syphilis, malaria, penicillamine, gold, CA:
Membranous GN.
31
Main treatment for FSGS:
Steroids with cyclophosphamide - Poor prognosis.
32
Main treatment for membranous GN:
Steroids, can add cyclophosphamide in refractory cases.
33
Main treatment for membranoproliferative GN:
Steroids. Plasmapheresis can be added.
34
Name the systemic diseases that can lead to nephritic syndrome.
1. SLE 2. SCA 3. HIV 4. Diabetes 5. Myeloma
35
Name the 5 types of GN?
1. Post-strep GN (PSGN) 2. RPGN 3. Mesangial proliferative GN 4. Membranoproliferative GN 5. IgA nephropathy
36
Nephritic syndrome - Self-limiting disease:
1. PSGN | 2. Henoch-Schonlein
37
Nephritic syndrome - Buerger disease:
IgA nephropathy
38
Nephritic syndrome - Coarse, granular IgG or C3 deposits:
PSGN
39
What is the MC glomerulonephropathy:
Buerger disease
40
What is the MC type of kidney stone?
Calcium pyrophosphate
41
What is the 2nd MC type of kidney stone?
Ammonium Mg Ph
42
What are the underlying bacterial etiologies of ammonium Mg Ph stones?
1. Proteus 2. Pseudomonas 3. Providencia 4. Staphylococcus sapro
43
How is nephrolithiasis diagnosed?
Plain films can identify radiopaque stones. Renal US can visualize hydronephrosis. IV pyelogram is another option. --> Non contrast CT can visualize small stones and is the GOLD standard for diagnosis.
44
What is the mnemonic for common pathogens causing UTIs?
KEEPS: ``` Klebsiella E.coli Enterobacter Proteus S.saprophyticus ```
45
What is the indication of a contaminated urinalysis?
Many epithelial cells or many types of bacteria present.
46
Other than urinalysis, what test should be ordered in a patient suspected to have a UTI?
1. Urine culture | 2. Gram stain and sensitivity
47
What is the 1st-line treatment for UTI?
3-day course of TMP-SMX. | In areas with resistance, ciprofloxacin is first choice.
48
In what patient should fluoroquinolones be avoided?
Pregnant patients.
49
How is anion gap calculated and what is a normal range?
Na - (Cl + HCO3). Normal range is 9-14.
50
What is Winter's formula?
It determines if there was appropriate compensation in the setting of metabolic acidosis: 1.5x(HCO3) +8 +/-2=Pco2.
51
What are the causes of anion gap metabolic acidosis?
MUD PILES ``` Methanol, Metformin Uremia DKA Paraldehyde INH, iron tablets Lactic acidosis Ethanol Salicylates ```
52
How is the etiology of the anion gap metabolic acidosis determined?
Check for ketonuria.
53
Anion gap metabolic acidosis - Ketonuria present:
1. DKA 2. Paraldehyde 3. Isopropyl alcohol ingestion 4. Starvation
54
Anion gap metabolic acidosis - Ketonuria Absent:
1. Lactic acidosis 2. Methanol 3. Ethylene glycol 4. Salicylate poisoning
55
What are the causes of normal anion gap metabolic acidosis?
1. Renal tubular acidosis 2. Diarrhea 3. Colostomy 4. Ileostomy 5. Ingestion of Mg sulfate 6. Calcium chloride 7. Acetazolamide 8. Hyperparathyroidism
56
What is in the DDX when a patient has the classic finding of HTN with HYPOkalemia?
Conn vs 2o hyperaldosteronism due to renal artery stenosis.
57
How is RAS diagnosed?
Imaging via renal arteriogram, MRA, or Doppler US.
58
How is RAS treated?
Angioplasty and in some cases surgery.
59
ARF - Signs and symptoms 2o to uremia:
1. Asterixis 2. Nausea 3. Vomiting 4. Anemia 5. Pericarditis 6. Pruritus 7. Urea crystals on the skin ("uremic frost"). 8. Fatigue 9. Oliguria