420 likes | 623 Views
Renal Megan McClintock, RN, MS 10/27/11. “TO PEE IS TO LIVE”. "Bones can break, muscles can atrophy, glands can loaf, even the brain can go to sleep without immediate danger to survival. But should the kidneys fail … neither bone, muscle, gland, nor brain could carry on.”
E N D
RenalMegan McClintock, RN, MS10/27/11 “TO PEE IS TO LIVE”
"Bones can break, muscles can atrophy, glands can loaf, even the brain can go to sleep without immediate danger to survival. But should the kidneys fail … neither bone, muscle, gland, nor brain could carry on.” • Smith HW: Fish to philosopher, Boston, 1953, Little, Brown.
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) KIDNEY DISEASE Acute kidney injury (AKI) Sudden onset Acute decrease in urine output and/or increase in creatinine Potentially reversible Mortality 60% Usually die from infection Gradual onset GFR < 60 mL/min for > 3 months Progressive and irreversible Mortality 19-24% (need dialysis to survive) Usually die from CV disease
ACUTE KIDNEY INJURY • Prerenal causes – external to the kidney, sudden reduction in blood flow to the kidneys • Usually resolve quickly with correction of cause • Intrarenal causes – infections, toxins, drugs, or direct trauma, ATN • Postrenal causes –urinary tract obstructions • Usually resolve quickly with correction of cause
ACUTE KIDNEY INJURYCLINICAL COURSE • Oliguric Phase (10-14 days) • Urine output less than 400 mL/day • UA w/ casts, RBCs, WBCs, SG fixed at 1.010, urine osmo of 300 mOsm/kg (may have proteinuria) • Volume depletion but oftentimes fluid retention • Metabolic acidosis • Sodium imbalance • Potassium increase • Hematologic disorders • Waste product accumulation • Neuro disorders
ACUTE KIDNEY INJURY CLINICAL COURSE • Diuretic Phase (1-3 weeks) • Begins with a gradual increase in daily urine output to 1-3 L • Nephrons still not fully functional • Kidneys can excrete waste, but still can’t concentrate the urine • Hypovolemia • Hypotension • Hyponatremia, hypokalemia
ACUTE KIDNEY INJURY CLINICAL COURSE • Recovery Phase (12 months) • Begins when the GFR increases • BUN and creatinine plateau, then decrease
ACUTE KIDNEY INJURYTREATMENT • Eliminate the cause, manage signs & symptoms, prevent complications • #1 goal is to ensure adequate cardiac output and intravascular volume • Careful monitoring of I/Os • Prevent hyperkalemia • Use RRT (renal replacement therapy) only if needed • Nutritional management
ACUTE KIDNEY INJURYTREATMENT • Avoid exposure to contrast media • Watch for nephrotoxic drugs • ACE inhibitors • Meticulous aseptic technique • Meticulous skin care • Meticulous mouth care
ACUTE KIDNEY INJURYNURSING DIAGNOSES • Decreased cardiac output • Excess fluid volume • Risk for infection • Imbalanced nutrition: less than body requirements • Fatigue • Anxiety • Dysrhythmias • Sensory/perceptual alterations
CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASE • Frequently asymptomatic • Early on have no change in urine output, may even have polyuria • Uremia develops when GFR is <10 mL/min • Persistent proteinuria • Tend to die of CV disease before needing dialysis
CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASETREATMENT • Treat high potassium • Control HTN • Treat anemia (EPO) • Treat hyperlipidemia • Restrict proteins • Restrict fluids • Restrict sodium, potassium, phosphates • Lots of teaching and reteaching
TREATING HYPERKALEMIA • Insulin • Sodium Bicarbonate • Calcium Gluconate IV • Dialysis • Sodium Polystyrene Sulfonate (kayexalate) • Dietary Restriction
Dialysis Peritoneal Dialysis (PD) Hemodialysis (HD)
PERITONEAL DIALYSIS • Three phases of PD • Manual vs Continuous • Complications
Fig 45-12 Temporary catheters Fig 45-13 placement of jugular vein temporary dialysis catheter
HEMODIALYSIS • Pre & Post Dialysis Interventions • Complications • Hypotension • Muscle cramps • Blood loss • Hepatitis
PYELONEPHRITIS • Cause – Bacteria (most common) • S/S – abrupt onset of chills, fever, vomiting, malaise, CVA pain, dysuria, urinary urgency and frequency • Labs – UA w/ pyuria, bacteriuria, hematuria, WBC casts; CBC w/ left shift (increase in bands) • Cx – Urosepsis leading to septic shock and death, chronic pyelonephritis
PYELONEPHRITIS INTERVENTIONS • Early tx for cystitis • Take antibiotics as prescribed • Follow-up urine culture • Drink at least 8 glasses of fluid daily • Rest
GLOMERULONEPHRITIS • Cause – Antibody-induced injury (exposure to drugs, immunizations, microbial/viral infxn) • S/S – generalized edema, HTN, oliguria, hematuria, proteinuria, abd/flank pain • Labs – UA w/ proteinuria, hematuria, WBC casts; increased BUN and creatinine, ASO titer • Cx – Renal insufficiency, destruction of renal tissue
GLOMERULONEPHRITIS INTERVENTIONS • REST • Diuretics, restricted sodium and fluids • Restrict dietary protein if in BUN. • Treat severe HTN with anti-hypertensives • No abx unless infection still present • Prevention - Take the FULL course of antibiotics (treat strep)
NEPHROTIC SYNDROME • Cause – systemic disease, allergens, drugs, infxn, glomerulonephritis • S/S – edema, massive proteinuria, HTN, hypoalbuminemia, hyperlipidemia • Labs – low albumin, low protein, high cholesterol • Cx – Infection, thromboembolism, skin breakdown, malnourishment, body image problems
NEPHROTIC SYNDROME INTERVENTIONS • ACE inhibitors, corticosteroids, diuretics, lipid-lowering agents • Low sodium, low-moderate protein diet (focus on preventing malnutrition) • Strict I/Os, daily weights • Protect skin • Prevention of infection
Minute paper • On the provided 3x5 card answer the following: • What was the most important thing you learned today. • What important point remains unclear to you?