Title: Acute Renal Failure
1Acute Renal Failure
2Defenition.
- Acute renal failure (ARF) is a syndrome
characterized by rapid decline in GFR (hours to
days), retention of nitrogenous waste products,
and perturbation of extracellular fluid volume
and electrolyte and acid-base homeostasis. - ARF complicates approximately 5 of hospital
admissions and up to 30 of admissions to
intensive care units.
3Definitions
- Anuria No UOP
- Oliguria UOPlt400-500 mL/d
- Azotemia Incr Cr, BUN
- May be prerenal, renal, postrenal
- Does not require any clinical findings
- Chronic Renal Insufficiency
- Deterioration over months-yrs
- GFR 10-20 mL/min, or 20-50 of normal
- ESRD GFR lt5 of normal
4Acute Renal Failure
- (1) diseases that cause renal hypoperfusion
without compromising the integrity of renal
parenchyma (prerenal ARF, prerenal azotemia)
(55) - (2) diseases that directly involve renal
parenchyma (intrinsic renal ARF, renal azotemia)
(40) - (3) diseases associated with urinary tract
obstruction (postrenal ARF, postrenal azotemia)
(5)
5- Most ARF is reversible, the kidney being
relatively unique among major organs in its
ability to recover from almost complete loss of
function. - ARF is associated with major in-hospital
morbidity and mortality.
6(No Transcript)
7- Autoregulatory dilatation of afferent arterioles
is maximal at mean systemic arterial blood
pressures of 80 mmHg, and hypotension below this
level is associated with a precipitous decline in
GFR. - Lesser degrees of hypotension may provoke
prerenal ARF in the elderly and in pts with
diseases affecting the integrity of afferent
arterioles (e.g., hypertensive nephrosclerosis,
diabetic vasculopathy). - Drugs that interfere with adaptive responses in
the renal microcirculation may trigger
progression of prerenal ARF to ischemic intrinsic
renal ARF .
8- Cyclooxygenase inhibitors NSAIDs or
angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) activity (ACE
inhibitors) and angiotensin II receptor blockers
are the major culprits and should be used
judiciously in the setting of suspected renal
hypoperfusion.
9- Hepatorenal Syndrome This is a particularly
aggressive form of ARF,with many of the features
of prerenal ARF, that frequently complicates
hepatic failure due to advanced cirrhosis or
other liver diseases, including malignancy,
hepatic resection, and biliary obstruction. - Carries a mortality rate of 90.
10(No Transcript)
11- Frequent offenders are the antimicrobial agents,
such as acyclovir,foscarnet, aminoglycosides,
amphotericin B, and pentamidine. - ARF complicates 10 to 30 of courses of
aminoglycoside antibiotics, even in the presence
of therapeutic levels
12contrast nephropathy
- Intrarenal vasoconstriction is a pivotal event in
ARF that is triggered by radiocontrast agents
cyclosporine, and tacrolimus (FK506). - .
13Contrast-Induced ARFPrevalence
- Less than 1 in patients with normal renal
function - Increases significantly with renal insufficiency
14Contrast-Induced ARFRisk Factors
- Renal insufficiency
- Diabetes mellitus
- Multiple myeloma
- High osmolar (ionic) contrast media
- Contrast medium volume
15Contrast-induced ARFClinical Characteristics
- Onset - 24 to 48 hrs after exposure
- Duration - 5 to 7 days
- Non-oliguric (majority)
- Dialysis - rarely needed
- Urinary sediment - variable
- Low fractional excretion of Na
16Contrast-induced ARFProphylactic Strategies
- Use I.V. contrast only when necessary
- Hydration
- Minimize contrast volume
- Low-osmolar (nonionic) contrast media
- N-acetylcysteine, fenoldopam
17- The syndrome appears to be dose-related, and its
incidence is only slightly reduced in high-risk
individuals by use of more expensive low
osmolality nonionic contrast agents.
18(No Transcript)
19ARF Focused History
- Nausea? Vomiting? Diarrhea?
- Hx of heart disease, liver disease, previous
renal disease, kidney stones, BPH? - Any recent illnesses?
- Any edema, change in
- urination?
- Any new medications?
- Any recent radiology studies?
- Rashes?
20ARF Signs and Symptoms
- Hyperkalemia
- Nausea/Vomiting
- HTN
- Pulmonary edema
- Ascites
- Asterixis
- Encephalopathy
21Physical Exam
- Volume Status
- Mucus membranes, orthostatics
- Cardiovascular
- JVP, pericardial rubs
- Pulmonary
- Decreased breath sounds
- Rales
- Rash (Allergic interstitial nephritis)
- Large prostate
- Extremities (Skin turgor, Edema)
22- Findings of CRF include anemia, neuropathy, and
radiologic evidence of renal osteodystrophy or
small scarred kidneys. - Anemia may also complicate ARF and renal size may
be normal or increased in several chronic renal
diseases (e.g.,diabetic nephropathy, amyloidosis,
polycystic kidney disease).
23W/U for ARF
- RFT-urea,creatinine .
- Potassium,Sodium,Uric acid.
- Urine
- Urine electrolytes and Urine Cr to calculate FeNa
- Urine eosinophils
- Urine sediment casts, cells, protein
- Uosm
- Kidney U/S - r/o hydronephrosis
24FeNa (urine Na x plasma Cr)
(plasma Na x urine Cr)
- (UNa, urine sodium concentration PCr, plasma
creatinine concentration PNa, plasma sodium
concentration UCr, urine creatinine
concentration) - FeNa lt1
- 1. PRERENAL
- Urine Na lt 20. Functioning tubules reabsorb lots
of filtered Na - 2. Glomerular or vascular injury
- Despite glomerular or vascular injury, pt may
still have well-preserved tubular function and be
able to concentrate Na
25- FeNa gt2
- ATN
- Damaged tubules can't reabsorb Na
26Calculating FeNa after pt has received Loop
Diuretics
- Caution with calculating FeNa if pt has gotten
Loop Diuretics in past 24-48 h - Loop diuretics cause natriuresis (incr urinary Na
excretion) that raises U Na-even if pt is
prerenal - So if FeNagt1, you dont know if this is because
pt is euvolemic or because Lasix increased the U
Na - So helpful if FeNa still lt1, but not if FeNa gt1
27Urinary Sediment
28A 22yr male with sickle cell anemia and abdominal
pain who has been vomiting nonstop for 2 days.
BUN45, Cr2.2.
- A. ATN
- B. Glomerulo-nephritis
- C. Dehydration
- D. AIN from NSAIDs
29A 22yr male with sickle cell anemia and abdominal
pain who has been vomiting nonstop for 2 days.
BUN45, Cr2.2.
- A. ATN
- B. Glomerulo-nephritis
- C. Dehydration
- D. AIN from NSAIDs
30Prerenal ARF
- Hyaline casts can be seen in normal pts
- NOT an abnormal finding
- UA in prerenal ARF is normal
31Intrinsic ARF
- Interstitial (AIN)
- Tubular (ATN)
- Glomerular (Glomerulonephritis)
- Vascular
32Urinary Sediment
- WBC Cells and WBC Casts
- Acute interstitial nephritis
- Acute pyelonephritis
33White Blood Cells
34White Blood Cell Cast
35WBC Casts
- Cells in the cast have nuclei
- (unlike RBC casts)
-
- Pathognomonic for Acute Interstitial Nephritis
36Acute Interstitial Nephritis
- 70 Drug hypersensitivity
- 30 Antibiotics PCNs (Methicillin),
Cephalosporins, Cipro - Sulfa drugs
- NSAIDs
- Allopurinol...
- 15 Infection
- Strep, Legionella, CMV, other bact/viruses
- 8 Idiopathic
- 6 Autoimmune Dz (Sarcoid, Tubulointerstitial
nephritis/Uveitis)
37AIN from Drugs
- Renal damage is NOT dose-dependent
- May take wks after initial exposure to drug
- Up to 18 mos to get AIN from NSAIDS!
- But only 3-5 d to develop AIN after second
exposure to drug - Fever (27)
- Serum Eosinophilia (23)
- Maculopapular rash (15)
- Bland sediment or WBCs, RBCs, non-nephrotic
proteinuria - WBC Casts are pathognomonic!
- Urine eosinophils on Wrights or Hansels Stain
- Also see urine eos in RPGN, renal atheroemboli...
38AIN Management
- Remove offending agent
- Most patients recover full kidney function in 1
year - Poor prognostic factors
- ARF gt 3 weeks
- Advanced age at onset
39Intrinsic ARF
- Interstitial (AIN)
- Tubular (ATN)
- Glomerular (Glomerulonephritis)
- Vascular
40Urinary Sediment
- RTE cells, Renal Tubular Epithelial Cell casts,
pigmented granular (muddy brown) casts - Acute tubular necrosis
41Renal Tubular Epithelial Cell Cast
42Pigmented Granular Casts
43You evaluate a 57yr man w/ oliguria and rapidly
increasing BUN, Cr.
- ATN
- Acute glomerulonephritis
- Acute interstitial nephritis
- Nephrotic Syndrome
44You evaluate a 57yr man w/ oliguria and rapidly
increasing BUN, Cr.
- ATN
- Acute glomerulonephritis
- Acute interstitial nephritis
- Nephrotic Syndrome
45ATN
- Muddy brown granular casts
46ATN
- Renal tubular epithelial cell casts
47ATN
- Broad casts (form in dilated, damaged tubules)
48ATNWhat to do
- Remove any offending agent
- IVF
- Try Lasix if euvolemic pt is not urinating
- Dialysis
- Most pts return to baseline Cr in 7-21 days
49ATN Prerenal
Cr increases at 0.3-0.5 /day increases slower than 0.3 /day
U Na, FeNa UNagt40 FeNa gt2 UNalt20 FeNalt1
UA epi cells, granular casts Normal
Response to volume Cr wont improve much Cr improves with IVF
BUN/Cr 10-151 gt201
50Intrinsic ARF
- Tubular (ATN)
- Interstitial (AIN)
- Glomerular (Glomerulonephritis)
- Vascular
51Urinary Sediment
- RBC casts or dysmorphic RBCs
- Acute glomerulonephritis
- Small vessel vasculitis
52Red Blood Cell Cast
53Red Blood Cells
Monomorphic
Dysmorphic
54Dysmorphic Red Blood Cells
55Dysmorphic Red Blood Cells
56You evaluate a 32yo woman with HTN, oliguria, and
rapidly increasing Cr, BUN. You spin her urine
- ATN
- Acute glomerulonephritis
- Acute interstitial nephritis
- Nephrotic Syndrome
57You evaluate a 32yo woman with HTN, oliguria, and
rapidly increasing Cr, BUN. You spin her urine
- ATN
- Acute glomerulonephritis
- Acute interstitial nephritis
- Nephrotic Syndrome
58Acute Glomerulonephritis
- RBC casts cells have no nuclei
- Casts in urine think INTRINSIC renal dz
- If she has Lupus w/recent viral prodrome, think
Rapidly Progressive Glomerulonephritis - If she had a sore throat 10 days ago, think
Postinfectious Proliferative Glomerulonephritis
59What are these?
60Glomerular Dz
- Hematuria (dysmorphic RBCs)
- RBC casts
- Lipiduria (increased glomerular permeability)
- Proteinuria (may be in nephrotic range)
- Fever, rash, arthralgias, pulmonary sx
- Elevated ESR, low complement levels
61 62Hydronephrosis
63Normal Renal Ultrasound
64Hydronephrosis
65Hydronephrosis
66 67Prevention
- What works?
- Maintenance of euvolemia
- Avoidance of nephrotoxins when possible
- NSAIDs, aminoglycoside, Amphotericin, IV contrast
- BP control--avoidance of excessive hypo- or
hypertension
68Contrast-Induced Nephrotoxicity
- If Crgt1.4, use pre-procedure prophylaxis
69Pre-Procedure Prophylaxis
- 1. IVF ( 0.9NS)
- 1-1.5 mg/kg/hour x12 hours prior to procedure and
6-12 hours after - 2. Mucomyst (N-acetylcysteine)
- Free radical scavenger prevents oxidative tissue
damage - 600mg po BID x 4 doses (2 before procedure, 2
after) - 3. Bicarbonate (JAMA 2004)
- Alkalinizing urine should reduce renal medullary
damage - D5W with 3 amps HCO3 bolus 3.5 mL/kg 1 hour
preprocedure, then 1mL/kg/hour for 6 hours
postprocedure - 4. Possibly helpful? Fenoldopam, Dopamine
- 5. Not helpful! Diuretics, Mannitol
70Prevention
- What doesnt work?
- Empiric use of
- Diuretics (i.e., Furosemide, Mannitol)
- Dopamine (or Dopamine agonists such as
Fenoldopam) - Calcium-channel blockers
71Acute Renal Failure Treatment
- Water and sodium restriction
- Protein restriction
- Potassium and phosphate restriction
- Adjust medication dosages
- Avoidance of further insults
- BP support
- Nephrotoxins
72Hyperkalemia
- Highly Arrhythmogenic
- Usually with progressive EKG changes
- Peaked T waves ---gt Widened QRS--gt Sinus wave
- Kgt 5.5 meq/L needs evaluation/intervention
- Usually in setting of Decrease GFR but
- medication also a common cause
- ACEI
- NSAIDS
- Septran, Heparin
73(No Transcript)
74Dialysis Indications
- Refractory hyperkalemia
- Metabolic acidosis
- Volume overload
- Mental status changes
75