Title: Renal Tubular Acidosis
1Renal Tubular Acidosis
2Normal Renal Function
- Proximal Tubule
- Reabsorption
- HCO3- (90) carbonic anhydrase
- calcium
- glucose
- Amino acids
- NaCl, water
- Distal Tubule
- Na reabsorbed
- H (NH4 or phosphate salts) excreted
- molar competition between H and K
- Aldosterone
3OUTLINE
- Renal tubular acidosis (RTA) is applied to a
group of transport defects in the reabsorption of
bicarbonate (HCO3-), the excretion of hydrogen
ion (H), or both. - The RTA syndromes are characterized by a
relatively normal GFR and a metabolic acidosis
accompanied by hyperchloremia and a normal plasma
anion gap.
4OBJECTIVES
- Physiology of Renal acidification.
- Types of RTA and characteristics
- Lab diagnosis of RTA
- Approach to a patient with RTA
- Treatment
5Physiology of Renal Acidification
- Kidneys excrete 50-100 meq/day of acid generated
daily. - This is achieved by H secretion at different
levels in the nephron. - The daily acid load cannot be excreted as free H
ions. - Secreted H ions are excreted by binding to
either buffers, such as HPO42- and creatinine, or
to NH3 to form NH4. - The extracellular pH is the primary physiologic
regulator of net acid excretion.
6- Renal acid-base homeostasis may be broadly
divided into 2 processes - Proximal tubular absorption of HCO3- (Proximal
acidification) - Distal Urinary acidification.
- Reabsorption of remaining HCO3- that escapes
proximally. - Excretion of fixed acids through buffering
Ammonia recycling and excretion of NH4.
7Proximal tubule physiology
- Proximal tubule contributes to renal
acidification by H secretion into the tubular
lumen through NHE3 transporter and by HCO3-
reabsorption. - Approx. 85 of filtered HCO3- is absorbed by the
proximal tubule. - The remaining 15 of the filtered HCO3- is
reabsorbed in the thick ascending limb and in the
outer medullary collecting tubule.
8Proximal tubule physiology
- Multiple factors are of primary importance
in normal bicarbonate reabsorption - The sodium-hydrogen exchanger in the luminal
membrane(NHE3). - The Na-K-ATPase pump
- The enzyme carbonic anhydrase II IV
- The electrogenic sodium-bicarbonate
cotransporter(NBC-1).
9.
10Ammonia recycling
- Ammonium synthesis and excretion is one of the
most important ways kidneys eliminate nonvolatile
acids. - Ammonium is produced via catabolism of glutamine
in the proximal tubule cells. - Luminal NH4 is partially reabsorbed in the thick
ascending limb and the NH3 then recycled within
the renal medulla
11Ammonia Recycling
12- The medullary interstitial NH3 reaches high
concentrations that allow NH3 to diffuse into the
tubular lumen in the medullary collecting tubule,
where it is trapped as NH4 by secreted H.
13Distal Urinary Acidification
- The thick ascending limb of Henles loop
reabsorbs about 15 of the filtered HCO3- load by
a mechanism similar to that present in the
proximal tubule, i.e., through Na-H apical
exchange(NHE3).
14H secretion
- The collecting tubule (CT) is the major site of
H secretion and is made up of the medullary
collecting duct (MCT) and the cortical collecting
duct (CCT). - Alpha and Beta-intercalated cells make up 40 of
the lining while Principal cells and collecting
tubule cells make up the remainder.
15- Alpha-Intercalated Cells are thought to be the
main cells involved with H secretion in the CT. - This is accomplished by an apically placed
H-K-ATPase and H-ATPase with a basolateral
Cl-/HCO3- exchanger and the usual basolateral Na
- K ATPase.
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17- Beta-Intercalated Cells in contrast to the above
have a luminal Cl-/HCO3- exchanger and a
basolateral H-ATPase. - They play a role in bicarbonate secretion into
the lumen that is later reabsorbed by the CA IV
rich luminal membrane of medullary collecting
duct.
18- CCT H secretion is individually coupled to Na
transport. Active Na reabsorption generates a
negative lumen potential favoring secretion of H
and K ions. - In contrast the MCT secretes H ions
independently of Na. - Medullary portion of the Collecting duct is the
most important site of urinary acidification
19Principal cells
20Aldosterone and Renal acidification
- Favors H and K secretion through enhanced
sodium transport. - Recruits more amiloride sensitive sodium channels
in the luminal membrane of the collecting tubule. - Enhances H-ATPase activity in cortical and
medullary collecting tubules. - Aldosterone also has an effect on NH4 excretion
by increasing NH3 synthesis
21Summary of renal physiology
- H secretion, bicarbonate reabsorption and NH4
production occur at the proximal tubule. Luminal
CA IV is present in the luminal membrane at this
site and in MCT. - NH4 reabsorption occurs at TAL of loop of Henle
and helps in ammonia recycling that facilitates
NH4 excretion at MCT. - H secretion occurs in the CCT either dependent
or independent of Na availability and in the MCT
as an independent process..
22OBJECTIVES
- Physiology of Renal Acidification.
- Types of RTA and characteristics
- Lab diagnosis of RTA
- Approach to a patient with RTA
- Treatment
23Renal Tubular Acidosis
24TYPES OF RTA
- Proximal RTA (type 2)
- Isolated bicarbonate defect
- Fanconi syndrome
- Distal RTA (type 1)
- Classic type
- Hyperkalemic distal RTA
- Hyperkalemic RTA (Type 4)
25Renal Tubular Acidosis
Type 2 RTA
Type 1 RTA Type 4 RTA
26PROXIMAL RTA
- Proximal RTA (pRTA) is a disorder leading to HCMA
secondary to impaired proximal reabsorption of
filtered bicarbonate. - Since the proximal tubule is responsible for the
reabsorption of 85-90 of filtered HCO3- a defect
at this site leads to delivery of large amounts
of bicarbonate to the distal tubule.
27- This leads to bicarbonaturia, kaliuresis and
sodium losses. - Thus patients will generally present with
hypokalemia and a HCMA (hyperchloremic metabolic
acidosis).
28.
29- Isolated defects in PCT function are rarely
found. Most patients with a pRTA will have
multiple defects in PCT function with subsequent
Fanconi Syndrome. - The most common causes of Fanconi syndrome in
adults are multiple myeloma and use of
acetazolamide. - In children, cystinosis is the most common.
30- pRTA is a self limiting disorder and fall of
serum HCO3- below 12 meq/l is unusual, as the
distal acidification mechanisms are intact.. - Urine ph become remains acidic(lt5.5) mostly but
becomes alkaline when bicarbonate losses are
corrected. - FEHCO3 increases(gt15)with administration of
alkali for correction of acidosis - (FEHCO3 fractional excretion of HCO3)
31Cause of hypokalemia in Type 2 RTA
- Metabolic acidosis in and of itself decreases pRT
Na reabsorption leading to increased distal
tubule delivery of Na which promotes K
secretion. - The pRTA defect almost inevitably leads to salt
wasting, volume depletion and secondary
hyperaldosteronism. - The rate of kaliuresis is proportional to distal
bicarbonate delivery. Because of this alkali
therapy tends to exaggerate the hypokalemia.
32- Patients with pRTA rarely develop nehrosclerosis
or nephrolithiasis. This is thought to be
secondary to high citrate excretion. - In children, the hypocalcemia as well as the HCMA
will lead to growth retardation, rickets,
osteomalacia and an abnormal vitamin D
metabolism. In adults osteopenia is generally
seen.
33To summarise Type 2 RTA
- Proximal defect
- Decreased reabsorption of HCO3-
- HCO3- wasting, net H excess
- Urine pH lt 5.5, although high initially
- K low to normal
34Type 2 RTA
- Causes
- Primary
- Idiopathic, sporadic
- Familial Cystinosis, Tyrosinemia, Hereditary
Fructose intolerance, Galactosemia, Glycogen
storage disease (type 1), Wilsons disease,
Lowes syndrome - Fanconis Syndrome
- Generalized proximal tubule dysfunction
- Proximal loss of phos, uric acid, glucose, AA
- Acquired
- Multiple Myeloma
- Carbonic anhydrase inhibitors (Acetazolamide)
- Other drugs (Ampho B, 6-mercaptopurine)
- Heavy Metal Poisonings (Lead, Copper, Mercury,
Calcium) - Amyloidosis
- Disorders of protein, Carb, AA metabolism
- Hypophosphatemia, hypouricosuria, renal
glycosuria with normal serum glucose
35DISTAL RTA
- Distal RTA (dRTA) is a disorder leading to HCMA
secondary to impaired distal H secretion. - It is characterized by inability to lower urine
ph maximally(lt5.5) under the stimulus of systemic
acidemia. The serum HCO3- levels are very low lt12
meq/l. - It is often associated with hypercalciuria,
hypocitraturia, nephrocalcinosis, and
osteomalacia.
36- The term incomplete distal RTA has been proposed
to describe patients with nephrolithiasis but
without metabolic acidosis. - Hypocitraturia is the usual underlying cause.
37- The most common causes in adults are autoimmune
disorders, such as Sjögren's syndrome, and other
conditions associated with chronic
hyperglobulinemia. - In children, type 1 RTA is most often a primary,
hereditary condition.
38Secretory defects causing Distal RTA
39Non secretory defects causing Distal RTA
- Gradient defect backleak of secretd H ions. Ex.
Amphotericin B - Voltage dependent defect impaired distal sodium
transport ex. Obstructive uropathy, sickle cell
disease, Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia, Lithium
and amiloride etc. - This form of distal RTA is associated with
hyperkalemia(Hyperkalemic distal RTA)
40- A high urinary pH (5.5) is found in the majority
of patients with a secretory dRTA. - Excretion of ammonium is low as a result of less
NH4trapping. This leads to a positive urine
anion gap. - Urine PCO2 does not increase normally after a
bicarbonate load reflecting decreased distal
hydrogen ion secretion. - Serum potassium is reduced in 50 of patients.
This is thought to be from increased kaliuresis
to offset decreased H and H-K-ATPase activity.
41What Charles Dickens character is theorized to
have suffered from RTA?
- Tiny Tim
- Growth retardation
- Bone disease
- Intermittent muscle weakness (hypokalemia)
- Kidney stones
- Progressive renal failure
- Death
Lewis DW, Am J Dis Child. 1992 Dec 146(12)
1403-7.
42To summarise Type 1 RTA
- First described, classical form
- Distal defect ? decreased H secretion
- H builds up in blood (acidotic)
- K secreted instead of H (hypokalemia)
- Urine pH gt 5.5
- Hypercalciuria
- Renal stones
43Type 1 RTA
- Causes
- Primary
- Idiopathic, sporadic
- Familial AD, AR
- Secondary
- Autoimmune (SLE, Sjogrens, RA)
- Hereditary hypercalciuria, hyperparathyroidism,
Vit D intoxication - Hypergammaglobulinemia
- Drugs (Amphotericin B, Ifosfamide, Lithium)
- Chronic hepatitis
- Obstructive uropathy
- Sickle cell anemia
- Renal transplantation
44(No Transcript)
45A 37-year-old man was referred for evaluation of
distal renal tubular acidosis
Serrano A and Batlle D. N Engl J Med 2008359e1
46Type 4 RTA (Hyperkalemic RTA)
- This disorder is characterized by modest HCMA
with normal AG and association with hyperkalemia. - This condition occurs primarily due to decreased
urinary ammonium excretion. - Hypoaldosteronism is considered to be the most
common etiology. Other causes include NSAIDS, ACE
inhibitors, adrenal insufficiency etc.
47Mechanism of action
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49- In contrast to hyperakalemic distal RTA, the
ability to lower urine ph in response to systemic
acidosis is maintained. - Nephrocalcinosis is absent in this disorder.
50To summarise Type 4 RTA
- Aldosterone deficiency or distal tubule
resistance to Aldosterone ? - Impaired function of Na/K-H (cation) exhange
mechanism - Decreased H and K secretion ?plasma buildup of
H and K (hyperkalemia) - Urine pH lt 5.5
51Renal Tubular Acidosis
Type 2 RTA
Type 1 RTA LOW serum K Type 4 RTA HIGH serum K
52Type 4 RTA
- Acquired Causes
- ? Renin
- Diabetic nephropathy
- NSAIDS
- Interstitial Nephritis
- Normal renin, ?Aldo
- ACEs, ARBs
- Heparin
- Primary adrenal response
- ?response to Aldo
- Medications K sparing drugs (Sprinolactone),
TMP-SMX, pentamidine, tacrolimus - Tubulointerstitial ds sickle cell, SLE, amyloid,
diabetes
53What happened to Type 3 RTA?
- Very rare
- Used to designate mixed dRTA and pRTA of
uncertain etiology - Now describes genetic defect in Type 2 carbonic
anhydrase (CA2), found in both proximal, distal
tubular cells and bone
54OBJECTIVES
- Physiology of Renal Acidification.
- Types of RTA and characteristics
- Lab diagnosis of RTA
- Approach to a patient with RTA
- Treatment
55Lab diagnosis of RTA
- RTA should be suspected when metabolic acidosis
is accompanied by hyperchloremia and a normal
plasma anion gap (Na - Cl- HCO3- 8 to 16
mmol/L) in a patient without evidence of
gastrointestinal HCO3- losses and who is not
taking acetazolamide or ingesting exogenous acid.
56Functional evaluation of proximal bicarbonate
absorption
- Fractional excretion of bicarbonate
- Urine ph monitoring during IV administration of
sodium bicarbonate. - FEHCO3 is increased in proximal RTA gt15 and is
low in other forms of RTA - (FEHCO3 fractional excretion of HCO3)
57Functional Evaluation of Distal Urinary
Acidification and Potassium Secretion
- Urine pH
- Urine anion gap
- Urine osmolal gap
- Urine pCO2
- TTKG (transtubular potassium gradient)
- Urinary citrate
58Urine ph
- In humans, the minimum urine pH that can be
achieved is 4.5 to 5.0. - Ideally urine ph should be measured in a fresh
morning urine sample. - A low urine ph does not ensure normal distal
acidification and vice versa. - The urine pH must always be evaluated in
conjunction with the urinary NH4 content to
assess the distal acidification process
adequately . - Urine sodium should be known and urine should not
be infected.
59Urine Anion Gap
- Urine AG Urine (Na K - Cl).
- The urine AG has a negative value in most
patients with a normal AG metabolic acidosis. - Patients with renal failure, type 1 (distal)
renal tubular acidosis (RTA), or
hypoaldosteronism (type 4 RTA) are unable to
excrete ammonium normally. As a result, the urine
AG will have a positive value.
60- There are, however, two settings in which the
urine AG cannot be used. - When the patient is volume depleted with a urine
sodium concentration below 25 meq/L. - When there is increased excretion of unmeasured
anions
61Urine osmolal gap
- When the urine AG is positive and it is unclear
whether increased excretion of unmeasured anions
is responsible, the urine ammonium concentration
can be estimated from calculation of the urine
osmolal gap. - UOGUosm - 2 x (Na K) urea nitrogen/2.8
glucose/18. - UOG of gt100 represents intact NH4 secretion.
62Urine pCO2
- Measure of distal acid secretion.
- In pRTA, unabsorbed HCO3 reacts with secreted H
ions to form H2CO3 that dissociate slowly to form
CO2 in MCT. - Urine-to-blood pCO2 is lt20 in pRTA.
- Urine-to-blood pCO2 is gt20 in distal RTA
reflecting impaired ammonium secretion.
63TTKG
- TTKG is a concentration gradient between the
tubular fluid at the end of the cortical
collecting tubule and the plasma. - TTKG Urine K (Urine osmolality /
Plasma osmolality) Plasma K. - Normal value is 8 and above.
- Value lt7 in a hyperkalemic patient indicates
hypoaldosteronism. - This formula is relatively accurate as long as
the urine osmolality exceeds that of the plasma
urine sodium concentration is above 25 meq/L
64Urine citrate
- The proximal tubule reabsorbs most (70-90) of
the filtered citrate. - Acid-base status plays the most significant role
in citrate excretion. - Alkalosis enhances citrate excretion, while
acidosis decreases it. - Citrate excretion is impaired by acidosis,
hypokalemia,highanimal protein diet and UTI.
65Table - Renal Tubular Acidosis
Primary defect Serum K Urine pH Other Causes
Type 1 distal H secretion decreased Low-nl gt 5.5 Renal stones Autoimmune (SLE, Sjogrens) Hypercalciuria Drugs (Ampho B, Ifosfamide, lithium) Hypergammaglobulinemia
Type 2 proximal HCO3- reab decreased Low-nl lt 5.5, although high initially Multiple Myeloma Acetazolamide Heavy Metal Poisonings (Lead, Copper, Mercury, Calcium) Amyloidosis Disorders of protein, Carb, AA metabolism
Type 4 Aldosterone deficiency, cation exchange decreased High lt 5.5 Aldosterone deficiency Diabetic nephropathy Spirinolactone Interstitial nephritis Obstructive uropathy Renal transplant
66OBJECTIVES
- Physiology of Renal acidification.
- Types of RTA and characteristics
- Lab diagnosis of RTA
- Approach to a patient with RTA
- Treatment
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69OBJECTIVES
- Physiology of Renal acidification.
- Types of RTA and characteristics
- Lab diagnosis of RTA
- Approach to a patient with RTA
- Treatment
70Treatment
- Proximal RTA
- A mixture of Na and K salts, preferably
citrate, is preferable. - 10 to 15 meq of alkali/kg may be required per day
to stay ahead of urinary losses. - Thiazide diuretic may be beneficial if large
doses of alkali are ineffective or not well
tolerated. - Vit D
71- Distal RTA
- Bicarbonate wasting is negligible in adults who
can generally be treated with 1 to 2 meq/kg of
sodium citrate or bicarbonate. Sodium citrate
tolerated better than sodium bicarb - Potassium citrate, alone or with sodium citrate,
is indicated for persistent hypokalemia or for
calcium stone disease. - For patients with hyperkalemic distal RTA,
high-sodium, low-potassium diet plus a thiazide
or loop diuretic if necessary.
72- Hyperkalemic RTA
- Treatment and prognosis depends on the underlying
cause. - Potassium-retaining drugs should always be
withdrawn.. - Fludrocortisone therapy may also be useful in
hyporeninemic hypoaldosteronism, preferably in
combination with a loop diuretic such as
furosemide to reduce the risk of extracellular
fluid volume expansion - Dietary restriction of sodium
73Take Home Points
- Distinguish RTA Types 1, 2 and 4
- See Table(slide no. 65) Some clues
- Type 1 renal stones, hypercalciuria, high urine
pH despite metabolic acidosis - Type 2 think acetazolamide and bicarbonate
wasting Fanconi syndrome - Type 4 aldosterone deficiency and hyperkalemia
- Mainstay of treatment of RTA
- Bicarbonate therapy
74