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Acute Renal Failure. Hai Ho, M.D. What is acute renal failure?. Impairment of kidney function leading to retention of substances normally excreted by the kidney Hours and days. Epidemiology. Overall mortality rate: 40-50%. Kidney anatomy & physiology. Kidney anatomy & physiology.
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Acute Renal Failure Hai Ho, M.D.
What is acute renal failure? • Impairment of kidney function leading to retention of substances normally excreted by the kidney • Hours and days
Epidemiology • Overall mortality rate: 40-50%
Compartmentalize causes? • Prenal • Renal or intrinsic • Postrenal
Pathophysiology of prerenal failure? Hypoperfusion to the kidney
Common causes of prerenal failure? • Hypovolumia • Bleeding • Burn • Dehydration from GI loss • Hypervolumia • Congestive heart failure • Third-spacing – cirrhosis, acute pancreatitis • Peripheral vasodilation • Septic shock
Common cause of intrinsic renal failure? • Acute tubular necrosis – most common cause of acute renal failure in hospitalized patients • Glomerulonephritis – rare, common in children after streptococcal infection
What is acute tubular necrosis? Disorder resulting from damage of renal tubule cells
What cause acute tubular necrosis? • Prerenal azotemia • Ischemia > 30 minutes • Most common in hospitalized patients • Rhabdomyolysis • Contrast dye • Drugs • Aminoglycosides • Amphotericin • NSAID • ACE-inhibitor
Common cause of postrenal failure? • Ureteric obstruction – tumors, stones • Bladder outflow obstruction (prostatism)
Clinical presentations of acute renal failure? • Asymptomatic • Decreased or no urine output • Hypervolumia • Pulmonary edema – tachycardia, tachapnea • Peripheral edema • Uremia – lethargy, nausea, anorexia • Arrhythmia – hyperkalemia, acidosis
Diagnostic tests • Renal function – GFR • Plasma creatinine • May not rise initially due to compensatory hypertrophy and hyperfiltration, therefore not detect actively declining GFR • Interesting in the trend rather than absolute value • Affect by muscle mass • Creatinine clearance • Stable renal function • Cockcroft-Gault equation
Cockcroft-Gault equation (140-age) x lean body weight (kg) --------------------------------------------- PCr (mg/dL) x 72 Women – multiple by 0.85
Diagnostic tests • Renal function – GFR • Plasma creatinine • May not rise initially due to compensatory hypertrophy and hyperfiltration, therefore not detect actively declining GFR • Interesting in the trend rather than absolute value • Creatinine clearance • Stable renal function • Cockcroft-Gault equation • BUN:Cr • 15:1 to 20:1 – prerenal, due to increased BUN absorption • 10:1 – cirrhosis or other hypoprotein state
Diagnostic tests • Renal function – GFR • Plasma creatinine • May not rise initially due to compensatory hypertrophy and hyperfiltration, therefore not detect actively declining GFR • Interesting in the trend rather than absolute value • Creatinine clearance • Stable renal function • Cockcroft-Gault equation • Fractional excretion of sodium
Fractional excretion of sodium UNa x PCr • FENa = --------------- x 100 PNa x UCr • Interpretation • <1% – prerenal, glomerulonephritis, obstruction • >2% – ATN • 1-2% - either prerenal or ATN • Not accurate before diuretics or IVF
Diagnostic tests • Urinalysis • Dipstick – hematuria and proteinuria • Microscopic examination • RBC cast – glomerulonephritis
RBC cast Damaged glomerular basement membrane
Diagnostic tests • Urinalysis • Dipstick – hematuria and proteinuria • Microscopic examination • RBC cast – glomerulonephritis • WBC cast – acute pyelonephritis
Diagnostic tests • Urinalysis • Dipstick – hematuria and proteinuria • Microscopic examination • RBC cast – glomerulonephritis • WBC cast – infection such as pyelonephritis • Granular cast – protein aggregate or degenerative cellular casts as in acute tubular necrosis
Diagnostic tests • Urinalysis • Dipstick – hematuria and proteinuria • Microscopic examination • RBC cast – glomerulonephritis • WBC cast – infection such as pyelonephritis • Granular cast – protein aggregate or degenerative cellular casts as in acute tubular necrosis • Positive blood on dipstick but negative RBC on microscopic exam - rhadomyolysis • Renal ultrasound
Renal ultrasound? • Obstruction – hydronephrosis • Chronic disease – atrophic kidney
Renal biopsy Selective cases such as glomerulonephritis, vasculitis, nephrotic syndrome
Treatment? • Treat the underlying cause • Prerenal – increase perfusion • Intrinsic – if possible, remove the culprit • Postrenal – relieve the obstruction
General management • Hyperkalemia – low K diet, lasix, insulin/glucose, NaHCO3, Kayexalate, Ca gluconate • Fluid retention and overload – diuresis, fluid restriction • Diet – low protein, high carbohydrates • Acetylcysteine with 0.45% NS with contrast study – reduce nephropathy • Dialysis
References • Acute tubular necrosis. http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/000512.htm • Acute renal failure http://www.firstconsult.com/ • http://www.supermt.com.tw/URNfiles/image/CASTS/RBCCAST/RBC%20cast.htm