KIDNEY DISEASES
ACUTE RENAL FAILURE:
There is sudden decline in renal
function leading to retention of nitrogenous and other waste products,
disordered H+ ion homeostasis and imbalance in ECF volume and
composition (dilutional hyponatraemia, retention of sodium and water,
hyperkalaemia due to retention of potassium). In ARF the impairment is
reversible unlike CRF which is irreversible and develop over a period of years.
ARF is classified into prerenal
(due to impaired renal perfusion), renal (within the kidney) and postrenal
(obstructive) causes.
Prerenal renal failure:
This is characterized by normal
renal structure, normal tubular function and rapid reversibility after
management. It is a consequence of reduced renal perfusion may be due to
cardiovascular insufficiency (hypovolaemia and hypotension), diuresis,
cardiogenic shock, GI fluid loss, burns, CHF, or derangement of intrarenal
haemodynamics.
Laboratory findings are increased
plasma urea disproportionately to creatinine because due to hypoperfusion more
urea is diffused back as urine flow rate falls.
Urinalysis shows hyaline casts and
there is no proteinuria.
There is low sodium in urine due to
more absorption induced by hypovolaemia (<20 mmol/L), urine
osmolality/plasma osmolality is >1.5, urine urea/plasma urea is >10.
Intrinsic renal failure:
It can progress from prerenal cause
but other conditions are present like nephrotoxins like NSAID, intrinsic renal
disease (glomerulonephritis), speticaemia, hypercalcaemia, sarcoidosis
(infiltrative disorder), etc. Acute tubular necrosis is used synonymously used
with intrinsic ARF.
Presence of proteinuria, urine sodium
>40 mmol/L, urine urea/plasma urea <5, urine osmolality/plasma osmolality
<1.1. Urea and creatinine
concentration in plasma rise in parallel.
Urinalysis shows high epithelial
cells free or in the form of cast, hematuria and red cell cast are present in
glomerulonephritis.
Acute tubular necrosis (ATN):
The causes of ATN are continued
vasoconstriction occurring due to intrarenal release of vasoactive substances
like endothelin and prostaglandins, and angiotensin II (renin secretion may
remain high secondary to decreased delivery of solute especially sodium to the
macula densa or due to hypovolaemia). This vasoconstriction reduces the renal
perfusion producing tubular necrosis. Also nephrotoxins can cause necrosis.
This necrosis also obstructs urine flow and impairs tubular sodium reabsorption
leading to oliguria and secondary release of renin that further produce
vasoconstriction respectively. Direct damage to the glomeruli results in
decreased filtration, and physical obstruction of lumens of nephrons by swollen
tubular cells or tubular debris.
Obstructive (postrenal) renal failure:
The common causes are ureteric
obstruction by calculi, tumors, urethral stricture, prostate carcinoma, etc.
There is oliguria or sometimes anuria in severe cases.
Plasma Na is low due to dilutional
hyponatraemia. Hyperkalaemia is life threatening complication of ARF and may
indicate renal replacement treatment (if plasma potassium >7.0 mmol/L).
Potassium increases due to decreased renal excretion, acidosis and loss of
intracellular potassium to ECF.
Patients with ARF are acidotic and
this is due to loss of bicarbonate, retention of hydrogen ions and this
requires further medical management.
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